Heather Lyons
Forfatter af The Collectors' Society
Serier
Værker af Heather Lyons
Unnamed 2 eksemplarer
Games and Animation (Kids Get Coding) 1 eksemplar
Kids Get Coding Develop Helpful Apps 1 eksemplar
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Almen Viden
- Køn
- female
Medlemmer
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Statistikker
- Værker
- 27
- Medlemmer
- 533
- Popularitet
- #46,708
- Vurdering
- 3.9
- Anmeldelser
- 28
- ISBN
- 87
My full review will be posted at my blog on 2/21 for the blog tour however let me just leave you with a top 5 list of why this is one of the best books I've read this year:
1) Medusa ("Dusa") is a vibrant, well-adjusted (considering her circumstances) young woman who doesn't angst endlessly about the tortures of her life. Though she acts the victim at first, she eventually realizes that crap has to end and takes charge of her future.
2) Hermes has his secrets, but only once does he not ask for Medusa's permission before upending her life (and he does it because she's not acting in her best self-interests). He also apologizes profusely and from that point on makes it a point to ask her.
3) Love is not always the answer, but it can be the answer if you work for it. Love doesn't instantly make ANYONE'S life better in this book, but for those who use that love as a way to make their life and those around them lives better, its the most precious thing of all.
4) All the mythology you can shake a stick at, but not quite what you may have learned from Bulfinch's or Edith Hamilton.
5) Jocko is awesome. I won't say who he is to the story, but gosh he was one of my favorite iterations yet.
So there you have it. What more do you need?
---Full review---
Medusa, who I've long been fascinated by, takes center stage in this story about a young woman struggling to rebuild not only her life, but her trust in love and friendship. The novel is broken up into several parts. We open on Medusa (called "Dusa" by Hermes) on her island as she mourns yet another unlucky soul who surprised her and was turned to stone. She tries really really hard to not let this happen--locks on her doors to keep out invaders while she sleeps, heavy duty sunglasses, scarves to cover her snakes (her "Girls") and maintaining a distance between herself and those she does see. Mikkos, a blind sailor who brings her gifts from the new world and has been visiting for half a century. And Hermes, who she goes to pains to never harm because she couldn't stand the thought of losing her best friend.
Then there's the Assembly where Medusa's punishment is reversed after two thousand years of injustice. From there its Medusa's journey to reclaiming what was taken from her by Poseidon and Athena all those years ago. Its a slow process with some fitful starts. While she trusts Hermes as her friend and trusts that he has nothing but good intentions for her, she's wary of every other God or Goddess she comes in contact with. They must want something from her she reasons because why else would they go to such lengths to trust her so well?
Its by no means an easy road for her. Love is a large part of this book--family love, sibling love, romantic love--and Lyons doesn't make it all rosy-colored. Just because someone loves you doesn't mean you have to love them, and just because you love someone doesn't mean you should expect them to change for you. Hermes explicitly states it at one point, but in Lyons world once a Greek God loves, its forever kind of love. Which this could have very easily become rather trite at times, but Lyons also makes it clear that for those Gods we see in love there was something so much more.
There's a mild spoiler for this next paragraph so highlight to see:
I'll admit that I did treat Hermes' revelation about genetics and DNA for the Gods' with about as much worth as a grain of salt. It was a handwave explanation to excuse a development that would have otherwise made his and Medusa's lives really really uncomfortable. I also wanted to know so much more about Hades and Persephone. Especially after we learn about how their relationship came to be (let's just say Persephone was the aggressor and Hades was a bit baffled by it all at first) and the ramifications thereof. And while Lyons touches very very briefly on the other Pantheons in existence (Hermes makes an off hand remark about it in relation to his work with Death and there's some Norse tossed in), this is clearly a Greek Pantheon dominated book. Which I have no issues with.
By in large the writing is very easy to fall into. Medusa isn't given over to purple prose (a bit in relation to Hermes) and she's a relate-able narrator. Later when she boils her story just down to the bare facts (no gods mentioned) for a group of people, its no different then anyone else's. She's a girl who tried her best to find a place to fit in, made a friend who took advantage of her and then spent the rest of her life labeled a monster for events out of her control. She spends much of the book railing against the injustice of it all (privately, or with Hermes), but as many characters point out she never came to terms with what happened to her.
In so many ways I loved this book and I fully recommend to not only those into greek mythology, but anyone looking for a novel about a girl who overcomes the traumas of her past to forge a much much brighter future.… (mere)