
Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark
Show
Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark is a musical based on the character Spider-Man, with music and lyrics...

Arcadian Nights
Book
The vibrant retelling of the central Greek myths by acclaimed novelist John Spurling, author of The...
The Complete Euripides: Volume V: Medea and Other Plays
Alan Shapiro, Euripides and Peter Burian
Book
Based on the conviction that only translators who write poetry themselves can properly re-create the...

Micky Barnard (542 KP) rated Wonder Woman: Warbringer in Books
Oct 6, 2018

Iphigenia in Splott
Book
Stumbling down Clifton Street at 11:30 a.m. drunk, Effie is the kind of girl you'd avoid eye contact...

Rachel Maria Berney (114 KP) rated Norse Mythology in Books
Dec 4, 2018

Penelope
Book
From a re-telling of the Greek myth: When Ulysses failed to return, suitors flocked around Penelope....

Herc
Book
This should be the story of Hercules: his twelve labours, his endless adventures…everyone’s...
Greek Mythology

ClareR (5841 KP) rated Song of the Huntress in Books
Jun 25, 2024
This had just the right amount of history, myth and magic for me - well, anything with those three things in is a winner, in my opinion!
With the resurgence of Greek Myth (yes, I’m a fan), it has been really heartening to see the odd Norse and Celtic myth and folklore book coming out. I enjoy a good retelling, and 5is is a good read. Yes, there are some seemingly modern themes: Æthelburg and Herla’s attraction and Ine’s asexuality in particular, but who’s to say these weren’t appropriate in 60AD? I’m sure homosexuality and asexuality have been a ‘thing’ for as long as there’s been humans (there probably is someone who could say - this is the internet, after all).
To me, as a listener/ reader, this just felt really genuine and well researched. I loved learning about the characters and their world.
Just as Sistersong left me eagerly awaiting Song of the Huntress, I’m really looking forward to whatever comes next from Lucy Holland.

ClareR (5841 KP) rated The Heroines in Books
Oct 29, 2023
Laura Shepperson gives voice to the women in the myths, and we see the story of Theseus and Phaedra from Phaedra’s point of view. There’s also a chorus of women who are suffering under the mistreatment of the men in Theseus’ palace. Servants and slave women had to do as they were told. The struggle for the women against this patriarchal system is at times violent, and the women rarely come out of it well.
There were a lot of characters in this, and I wonder if all of them were necessary. I’ll be honest, and it could be down to the good ole peri-meno brain, I did get a little confused at all the characters, but it didn’t spoil the story!
I enjoyed this quick read (ok, I didn’t put it down!). It gave me enjoyment for a couple of days - and that’s what reading is all about really, isn’t it!