Mythology Monday: A few more adventures of Hercules

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Hercules went on to have a ton more adventures before dying/becoming a god. Two I’m not going to cover in this series of Mythology Mondays are his adventures with Jason and the Argonauts (that’s a whole new series by itself) and the battle against the giants. I’ll tell them eventually, but through a broader lens than just Herc’s place in it.

Hercules had a few divine friends, one of whom was Dionysus, the god of wine. Dionysus wanted Hercules to tell him how to get to the Underworld. Hercules told him a few unique ways to commit suicide, but eventually relented. But not before challenging the god to a drinking contest. He lost, and had to join Dionysus’ cult for a while.

He fought death, and won. Not in a metaphorical sense either. There was a man who was dying of an illness, his wife offered to take his place. Thanatos took an appointment and when he was supposed to collect the wife, Herc strangled him until he agreed to let them both live.

He took bad kings off of thrones and restored the rightful heirs so often that the myths got a bit repetitive. He killed abusive bosses or annoying people. There was one man who would force travelers to work in his vineyard if they wanted to pass through without getting clubbed to death. Herc killed him and put an end to that. He won contests. He studied with scholars and killed thieves. He was the original super hero. I think of him as an ancient version of Chuck Norris.

He also saved Troy (long before the Trojan war). Poseidon had sent a sea monster to attack Troy, and the King of Troy was going to sacrifice his daughter to appease the beast. Hercules intervened and killed the monster in exchange for horses Zeus had gifted the city as an apology for kidnapping the beautiful young man Ganymede. The King went back on his word to give up the horses, so Hercules pillaged Troy and killed all his sons.

Next week, we’ll explore Hercules’ love life and his death.

Thursday Review: Persephone’s Orchard

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The Blurb:

The Greek gods never actually existed. Did they? Sophie Darrow finds she was wrong about that assumption when she’s pulled into the spirit realm, complete with an Underworld, on her first day at college. Adrian, the mysterious young man who brought her there, simply wants her to taste a pomegranate.

Soon, though she returns to her regular life, her mind begins exploding with dreams and memories of ancient times; of a love between two Greeks named Persephone and Hades. But lethal danger has always surrounded the immortals, and now that she’s tainted with the Underworld’s magic, that danger is drawing closer to Sophie.

My Thoughts: I actually really liked this book! When I first realized that this was one of those “Persephone reincarnated into the modern day” things I have to admit, I was nervous. I’ve read a lot of versions of Persephone (though I waited until my first book was completely drafted and in queries until I did, just to be safe with the exception of L.J Smith’s Forbidden Games that was my favorite book when I was twelve, seriously, read it.), and I’ve seen that done several times without it ever actually seeming to work (for me, lots of people love them and there’s nothing wrong with that). Either Hades is always still Hades, but Persephone is somehow being reborn every so often, which feels really weird to me, or they’re both not exactly reincarnations, but two people with similar powers who just so happen to repeat a similar story for no real, concrete reason.

This book succeeded where those books failed. Yes, the characters were reincarnations of Hades and Persephone, but they both were and they were also 100% themselves. Sophie was a character in her own right as well as being Persephone who managed to be a completely developed, independent character of her own that complimented Sophie in such a way that it felt natural that they were also the same person.

Ringle captures the complexities of the whole reincarnation thing without resorting to “Oh, we like, loved each other in another life, so we’re in insta-love now” trope. Each lifetime felt like it happened, and it mattered, and that it happened independently of their prior lives. Sophie didn’t like Adrian at first, it took her a long time to warm up to him, and when she did the pacing felt natural, not like she was forced into it by her prior lives.

I’m sure I’m babbling, but this is seriously the only time I’ve seen reincarnated souls that actually had enough depth to be believable. It kind of reminded me of Soul Mates by L.J Smith, but for a more mature audience.

I also really enjoyed Ringle’s vision of the Greek gods of being essentially gifted humans who happened to be immortal. They don’t have limitless power, and they were kind of figuring everything out as they went along. I thought the whole Thanatos cult against the immortals thing was pretty interesting and kept the tension high, butt honestly I didn’t even need conflict. I was so wrapped up in watching this world and all the lifetimes within it unfold that the conflict and tension was bonus. This was a beautiful story, and I’m really excited to see how it unfolds in future installments of the series.

Hot Paranormal Nights Blog Hop: Why I write paranormal books

It started young. I was sitting on a carpet, knee to knee with my pastor, surrounded by ten or fifteen other squirming children while Mrs. Patty played “Jesus Loves Me,” on the piano. The music stopped, and the pastor looked at each one of us, a smile on his face, ignoring the pews full of adults.

“Let’s talk about the future. Kaitlin, do you know what you want to be when you grow up?”

I considered for a moment. I looked from my pastor, to the cross hanging above his head and found my answer.

“God.”

The church burst out laughing. I looked at the audience in confusion. What was so funny? I wanted to be different, and powerful, and loved by everyone in the whole wide world. What was wrong with that?

The pastor chuckled. “That job is already taken.”

“Oh,” I frowned, deep in thought. “Can I be the little mermaid then?”

For as long as I can remember, I’ve wanted more. Being human was just so plain and boring. Why couldn’t I be a magical mermaid princess? Or an all powerful deity? As I grew, the feeling didn’t go away. I gravitated toward books about twins with telepathy, vampires, witches, and shape-shifters. I watched shows, like Sailor Moon, and took long walks around my neighborhood, hoping against hope that I’d find a talking cat who would tell me I was really a princess.

I made up elaborate stories, telling people I was adopted, or had a twin sister. I pretended to have magic. I wanted so desperately to be special.

In retrospect, it wasn’t just the magic I wanted. I wanted to belong to something special. Something bigger than me. Sailor Moon had her Sailor Scouts, the secret circle had each other. The vampires had their own underground society. The children at Hogwarts had each other. Buffy had her click. It wasn’t like I didn’t have friends, but I wanted the type of relationships I saw in these books. Strong and unbreakable because of everything they’d gone through together. They all had a secret, and in bound them in a way that nothing normal ever could.

Friends are great and all, but no story featuring any paranormal activity would be complete without a hot love interest. My first crush, ever, was on Julian from The Forbidden Games trilogy. Equally enticing as the idea of being special, was the idea of finding that one person, who might be a bit dark and was probably a little dangerous who understood a part of you better than you did. These heroes are often broody, good-looking, sarcastic, and for whatever reason are drawn to– no, need– the protagonist. I wanted that.

I really did want that. Right up until I met the first broody, sarcastic boy in my middle school. I spent five minutes in a class-room with a boy who had the good looks of Tuxedo Mask, and all the charming qualities (i.e sarcasm, condescension, argumentative). I took a moment to wonder, was this the start of an epic romance? Would our back and forth eventually lead to a heat of the moment kiss? Five minutes lapsed into ten, and I came to a sad conclusion about myself.

If I were the protagonist of one of my books, would have lost my chance at an epic romance in chapter one by telling the romantic interest where he could shove it and then spending the rest of the book as far away from him as possible. Turns out, guys who treat people the way that most paranormal love interests do at the start the story come off as jerks for a reason. They are jerks. Being the one and only person who can get through Mr. Paranormal love-interests tough exterior kind of requires having the patience to break through that tough exterior. I don’t.

Fine. No epic love interest for me. But surely I could have magic. Then I realized something when reading one of the So You Want to be a Wizard books by Diane Duane. Nita had just confessed to her parents that she was a wizard. Her father told her something to the extent of, “I get why you want to do this, had I been given magic as a kid I would want it too, but…” and Nita tried to point out that he was lying. Had he wanted magic, been the right candidate for it, or whatever, he would have found it. It would have called to him, found him. The fact that it hadn’t meant he really wasn’t a match for it.

I think that one line of exposition in that one middle grade novel broke my heart. My whole life, I’d assumed that magic, if it was out there, would find me. I’d be one of the kids that got an invitation to Hogwarts. I’d be the victim in the freak accident, granting me superpowers. But in reality, if that stuff existed, more likely than not, I’d either never know about it, or I’d be one of the random sidekicks. After all, I’m not super rich. I’ve never won the lottery. I’m not a princess. I’m not a genius. I wasn’t born in New Zealand. Each and every one of those things is real. They’re all random luck of the draw. If I’m not anyone of those things, why would I ever assume I’d be lucky enough to be some magical hero?

Then I realized something else. Magic came with baggage. I didn’t want to lose my family, even if it meant it would awaken magical powers. I didn’t actually want the burden of saving the world. I barely recycle. I didn’t want to worry that my actions would put my friends and loved ones in danger. Maybe I’ll never form the kind of bonds that come with fighting to the death beside a band of unlikely misfits turned hero, but bonus, I’d never have to fight to the death!

In short, I grew up. I realized I was pretty lucky. Most of the protagonists in those books would sell their souls to have my life. I have friends, and I didn’t have to save their lives to get them. I met my dream guy, married him, and have a daughter. I started reading the books and watching the shows differently. Now, I didn’t breeze by the sad stuff and focus on what they got out of it. I realized what they lost. There’s a ton of books I can’t read anymore because it’s too sad.

I thought I was the only one who’d gone through this. Then my mom’s group started a book club and we had a talk about our favorite books and movies when we were younger. I realized something shocking. They’d all felt the same way. Every single one of them spent countless hours dreaming, and wishing, and hoping to be something different, something special. And every single one us, on rereading, or rewatching, were horrified at how tragic the main characters lives were. None of us would wish that life on anyone, much less want it for ourselves.

There is something tragic and isolating about childhood that lasts all the way to young adulthood. Some part of us that’s terrified that this is it, and wishes desperately for something more. Something that’s afraid of being alone and powerless. That fear is reflected in every.single. children’s story. Maybe it’s because when you’re young, you’re still learning about the world and trying to figure out your place in it and your limitations. I remember that feeling, which is why the worlds I create in my books are full of magic and wonder.

So in light of my grass-is-greener paranormal philosophy, I propose a giveaway. Pick your favorite protagonist from a paranormal book and name one thing you have that they would be jealous of. OR one thing about your favorite paranormal love interest that would probably drive you insane if you actually had to live with it every day. My favorite comment gets a copy of my paranormal romance novel, Persephone.

Happy hopping everyone

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Mythology Monday: The final labors of Hercules

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The tenth labor of Hercules was to get cattle from the monster Geryon. Geryon was a giant and a grandson to Medusa who lived on the island Erytheia. He either had one body and three heads or three conjoined bodies depending on the myth you read. Sometimes he even had wings. He had a watch dog with two heads that was a brother to Cerberus that guarded the cattle.

Hercules had to cross the desert to get to Erytheia, and he didn’t like the heat. He threw a temper tantrum and shot at Helios with an arrow. Helios was shocked at Hercules’ bravery (odd reaction from such a volatile species, but whatever) and gave Hercules a magical golden cup that Helios used to cross the entire sea each night. Hercules used it to get to Erytheia quickly.

Hercules arrived and promptly killed the two headed puppy with his club :(. Geryone was furious and charged after Hercules, but Herc shot him with one of his poisonous arrows with so much force that it split the monsters head in half. Gross.

Herc herded the cattle back to Eurystheus. On the way some versions of the myth have a young man named Cacus stealing a few of the cattle by walking them backward so they left no trail. Herc tracked them down and killed the kid who stole them. Hera also intervened, sending gadflies to bite the cattle and scatter them, but Herc tracked them all down within a year. She also flooded a river so he couldn’t cross, but Herc piled some rocks and made the river shallower.

While tracking down the cattle, Hercules battled with two giants, Albion and Bergion or Dercynus, sons of Poseidon. Worried he couldn’t defeat them, Hercules prayed to his father Zeus for help. Zeus helped him win, and was so flattered by the prayer he put a constellation in the sky of Hercules kneeling to him.

Upon arriving back to Eurystheus, Herc sacrificed the cattle to Hera. He seriously could not take a hint. The woman hated him, just accept it and stop trying to appease her because everything he did just pissed her off more.

But Hercules was horrifyingly bad at taking hints, so he set off for his eleventh labor to steal apples from Hesperides, nymphs that guarded a garden in the Atlas Mountains, which of course belonged to Hera. The golden apples that grew in this garden could grant immortality. These were also guarded by a dragon with one-hundred heads named Ladon. One of these apples was later used to start the Trojan War by the goddess of discord.

Hercules first had to find the garden. To do that he caught the old man of the sea, a shapeshifting sea god. The Old Man can answer any questions if captured AND if you can hang on while he changes shape. He got directions, and on his way to the garden bumped into Antaeus, a monster who could not be killed so long as he was touching the earth. His parents were Poseidon and Gaia.

No problem. Hercules lifted him up and crushed him.

Upon reaching the gardens, Hercules asked for help from the father of the nymphs (in some versions), Atlas. Atlas agreed, if Hercules agreed to hold the weight of the world while he went and grabbed them. Hercules took on the weight of the world and waited patiently, but Atlas decided he didn’t want to return.

Some background on Atlas. Atlas was a Titan who sided against the Olympians in the Titanomachy.
As punishment, Zeus had him stand on the western corner of Gaia (earth) and hold Uranus (the sky) up on his shoulders so they could never make more baby Titans. The earth and the sky can never, ever touch. He did NOT hold the planet. Just the sky.

Anyway, depending on the version of the myth, Hercules either tricked Atlas into taking the weight again, or built the pillars of Hercules so that no one had to hold the sky in place. I prefer to the latter because I have a very difficult time believing Atlas would be so easily tricked (it literally went like “Sure Atlas, I’ll hold the world, but can you take it for a second so I can rearrange my cloak to be more comfortable. Atlas: Sure thing, buddy. Hercules: hhahahaha! *runs away*) into taking back the sky.

But since Atlas got the apples, not Hercules, he had to do a twelfth labor. To capture Cerberus, Hades’ three headed puppy.

Cerberus was the son of Echidna and Typhon. His three heads represented the past, present, and the future as well as youth, middle age, and old age. He stopped souls from crossing the river Styx and going back to the living realm.

Hercules was not allowed to use any weapons and had to travel to the Underworld. To learn to travel to the Underworld, he had to be inducted into the Eleusinian Mysteries, a cult that worshiped Demeter, Persephone, Hades, and Orpheus (who in my book named his CD the Eleusinian Mysteries). Passing into the Underworld somehow absolved Herc from his drunken party turned murder fest with the minotaurs from way back in his early labors. While passing through, Hercules rescued Theseus who, along with Pirithous was stuck to a chair for trying to abduct Persephone. He tried to free Pirithous too, but Hades wasn’t having it.

While he had Hades’ attention, Herc asked if he could borrow Cerberus. Hades agreed, so long as Herc promised not to use weapons on his puppy. Herc agreed, then slung Cerberus over his shoulder and found his way back to the living realm, completing his final labor.

In my universe, Cerberus was never returned to the Underworld, so Hades holds a grudge against Hercules.

We are not done with Hercules yet! He still had lots of adventures.

Sunday Short: Aphrodite’s first chapters from Hades’ POV

Aphrodite was not one of the original narrators for Iron Queen. It took me writing these two chapters to realize the story NEEDED her voice to make sense. Her perspective was important to the story, and it told me things I couldn’t get from Hades. This is a cut, unedited, very, very rough set of scenes in Hades’ perspective that ended up being reworked to be in Aphrodite’s pov. Enjoy 🙂

Chapter I
Hades

“Hades?”
Cool hands shook me and I opened my eyes with a groan. Aquamarine eyes looked at me in concern. I blinked, recognizing Aphrodite.
“Hades!” She shook me again.
Why am I on the ground? I was sprawled across dry leaves, half dead grass, and dirt. My head felt like it was full of molten lava. I could feel an entrance to the Underworld nearby. Something was wrong. Really wrong.
“Hades!” Aphrodite shook me again. “Where is she?”
Persephone! I bolted upright as the memories crashed back. We’d been wrong about Aphrodite. It was Joel. Joel was Zeus! And I’d left her alone with him.
Persephone’s voice, desperate and frightened, had surged through my mind. I can get him to the entrance, Hades. This can still work!
Then blinding pain surged through our connection and I’d been on the ground.
I shoved past Aphrodite and ran up the dirt path.
“Hades, where is she? What happened?” Aphrodite asked. She lagged behind me, picking through the forest in her heels. “She called me for help. She said that Thanatos was working with Zeus and he’d attacked her. I told her to stay behind a shield while she waited for me.” She cleared her throat. “She said Thanatos was dead.”
“More than dead.” I’d killed him then destroyed his soul. Enjoyed every minute of it too. Thanatos had spent months torturing my wife. An excruciatingly painful death was the least he deserved.
“She already told you?” There was a crash and a thud. Leaves crunched, twigs snapped. Aphrodite cursed. A red heel flew past my head. “Hey!” She shouted, picking herself up from a pile of leaves. “I’m talking to you! What happened? Where is Persephone? And why the hell were you unconscious!”
I kept pushing through the woods. Bent and crushed daisies were randomly strewn across the path.
Another heel flew past me. “What did you do? You were a jerk about it, weren’t you!” Aphrodite glanced back in the direction we’d come from. “Did she knock you out?”
I didn’t dignify that with a response. Here. I stopped when I reached a small gazebo. A bouquet of daises littered the ground. The earth was scorched. There was no sign of either of them. I knelt, fingers brushing the dirt. Sunlight filtered through the trees, and a cool breeze carried the smell of barbecue. Hadn’t it just been raining? How long had I been out? The wet dirt stuck to my fingers, and I stared at it, lost in thought.
She’d been in so much pain. There was nothing in the space she inhabited in my mind now. Complete silence.
It couldn’t have been long. Aphrodite had just pulled up when– I closed my eyes against the echo of the searing pain that had flashed through my head. I’d been shielded. How long did it take for a shield to drop if I lost consciousness? How far could they go? How could they travel?
Aphrodite’s breath hitched, interrupting my mental math. “No.” She turned to face me. “You let him take her?”
Loathing, pure and unadulterated flashed through me, boiling my blood. She saw it in my face and blanched.
“You knew.” It wasn’t a question.
She stepped backward, holding her hands up in surrender.
“Please, please don’t hurt me. I didn’t–”
“Didn’t what?”
She flinched. “P… Please. He said he wouldn’t need to hurt her.”
A vision of my wife being struck by lightning flashed through my brain.
“He didn’t need to.”
“I didn’t know–”
“Didn’t know what?” I closed the gap between us. She backed up, stopping when her back met a tree. “Didn’t know he would take her? Didn’t know he would hurt her? Didn’t know he was pretending to be Joel? What didn’t you know? We told you he was dangerous. We told you what he wanted. And after everything she did for you, you pushed her toward him! Why?”
“He’s our father!” Aphrodite’s voice broke.
“You honestly think he gives a damn about you!” I grabbed her by the shoulders. She felt small and fragile. It would be easy, so easy to break her. “You’re nothing but a tool to him, and you just threw the only person who gave a damn about you to the wolves. He left you here, with me and Demeter. What exactly do you think happens next?”
She seemed to consider that. The fear melted away from her face and confidence filled her eyes. “You’re not going to hurt me.”
I tightened my grip, fingers biting into her flesh. “And what makes you so sure of that?”
“She wouldn’t want you to.”
She was right. Persephone and I dealt with things… Differently. My way tended to be a lot more violent. But Persephone knew that. “Didn’t stop me with Thanatos, and that sure as hell isn’t going to protect you from Demeter.”
She swallowed hard. “I didn’t have a choice.”
“Bullshit.”
“I didn’t!” Her voice rose. “He’s my father.”
I let her go and put some distance between us so I didn’t completely lose it and hit her. “That doesn’t mean anything!”
“Yes, it does. Hades, I couldn’t tell her. I tried, but he told me not to.” She threw up her hands in frustration. “He’s my father.”
No. My mouth dropped open. No. No one would do that. It was unthinkable. Horrific. Even the Titans had given us free will. Lot of good that did them.
“You have to listen to him.” I’d missed that. How had I missed that? She’d called Persephone sister. Gods didn’t think of each other like that. We weren’t family, we were just created. There were no genetic ties. No grouping instincts. Those were human weaknesses. Exceptions were rare. Demeter chose to act like a human mother toward Persephone, and Persephone treated her accordingly, but Aphrodite hadn’t been raised with those beliefs or expectations. When she latched on to those titles right a way it should have been a huge red flag.
But then I’d also missed the fact that one of my most trusted advisors was working with Zeus, that my wife was being tortured by Reapers, and that her new boyfriend was actually the very man I’d been hunting for months.
What was wrong with me? I was usually more on top of things. I’m one of the only gods left. I didn’t get where I am today by being oblivious to the world around me.
Aphrodite watched me with wary eyes. “I didn’t realize I had to listen to him. Not until I saw him here in the park.” Her lips were pressed together so hard they’d turned white. “She fought against him so hard. But he was using the Reapers to wear her down so he could charm her. She didn’t have a chance. You should have kept her in the Underworld.”
“You think?” I pushed my hair out of my face. “Come on, let’s get to the bridge.” I set off for the lake in the center of the park.
Aphrodite hastened after me. “The bridge, why?”
“I’ve got to call Demeter. Do you want to be standing in her realm when she finds out Zeus has her daughter?”
Aphrodite blanched, and quickened her pace.
****
I hadn’t even hung up Persephone’s phone when Demeter appeared beside me on the wooden bridge.
“What do you mean Zeus has her? You told me you’d keep her in the Underworld where she’d be safe.” Demeter’s color was high, her eyes blazing with fury. She was a good bit shorter than me, but for a second it still felt like she was towering over me. Persephone could have the same effect. I shook my head, it was weird how alike they looked, and right now I couldn’t get Demeter’s daughter out of my head.
Then her gaze fell on Aphrodite. “What are you doing here?”
I stepped in front of Aphrodite before Demeter could do any damage. “We were wrong. Joel was Zeus, and when he created Aphrodite he programmed–” I shot Aphrodite an apologetic glance for not finding a better word for it, “her to follow orders.”
“It’s just loyalty to family,” Aphrodite interjected, voice small. “It worked for her, too, just to a lesser degree.”
My eyebrows shot up. “Persephone wouldn’t control you.”
“Have you met your wife? She’s bossy and–” Aphrodite glanced between me and Demeter and cleared her throat. “Gosh, she’s just a wonderful person. I’m sure she would have toned it down had she known I had to listen to her.”
“Joel is Zeus?” Demeter sounded shocked. She shook her head as if to clear it and focused on Aphrodite. “What else were you ordered to do?”
“Nothing further for the moment. But if I were you, I’d keep me supervised by someone that can’t be charmed.”
Demeter gritted her teeth and turned to me. “This is your fault. You brought her–” she jabbed a finger at Aphrodite. “To my realm, you put her under my roof with my daughter. You let Zeus–”
“I didn’t let him take her. If you weren’t so stingy with your teleportation authorization, I’d have been able to get to her–”
Demeter paled with fury. “Are you suggesting this is somehow my fault? You made her a target when you forced her to marry you–”
“She was already a target! And thanks to you, she was helpless. Had she known what she was–”
“Really,” Aphrodite interrupted. “The blame game? That’s the most important thing on the agenda right now? Okay, I’ll take a turn then. This is your fault–” she gestured at me. “Because you’re an idiot. Had you treated her more like your wife and less like an addlepated teenager she wouldn’t have given Joel a second look. She should have been too powerful for Zeus to charm and had you two been linked the way you should have, then you would have known about Thanatos and the Reapers.
“But don’t look so smug,” she added, turning to Demeter. “You’d have her believe she was nothing, just some silly mortal teenager. She shouldn’t have been going on dates and hanging out with friends. There are demi gods and minor deities going missing from your realm.”
Demeter looked at her in surprise.
“Oh yes, I know all about that.” Aphrodite smiled. “Did it ever occur to you that she could help? That she should help? You know, the only person who treated her with the respect due to her station and level of powers is Zeus. He at least treats her like a threat. You two–” Aphrodite waved her hand. “You two seem to have forgotten that she can actually be useful.”
Demeter looked like she was about to say something, but I cut her off. “Aphrodite is right. We don’t have time to argue about this right now. We need to rescue–”
“Rescue her!’ Aphrodite exclaimed. “You two still don’t get it, do you? She’s powerful! She ranks, and incidentally, she’s part of a very small group left that can kill Zeus. Use her.”
Demeter shook her head. “She’s not strong enough.”
Aphrodite scoffed, and propped herself up on the rail of the bridge. A fountain set in the center of the lake sparkled behind her, bathing her in glittering light. “Well then let’s fix that. I swear fealty–”
My hand shot out, nearly knocking her from the bridge. “Stop.” Persephone still hadn’t come into her powers yet. Too much unfiltered power could kill her.
My throat constricted. I’d been channeling the excess power away every night. If we didn’t find her soon…
Aphrodite’s eyes flicked over my face. “Exactly. If she’s going to die anyway, why not take Zeus down with her?’

Thursday Review: The Red Pyramid by Rick Riordan

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I’m going to skip the blurb for now and just include the first page, which might be the best story beginning I’ve heard in a long time. It reminded me of those choose your own adventure books, and definitely caught m attention.

We only have a few hours, so listen carefully. If you’re hearing this story, you’re already in danger. Sadie and I might be your only chance.

Go to the school. Find the locker. I won’t tell you which school or which locker, because if you’re the right person, you’ll find it. The combination is 13/32/33. By the time you finish listening, you’ll know what those numbers mean. Just remember the story we’re about to tell you isn’t complete yet. How it ends will depend on you.

The most important thing: when you open the package and find what’s inside, don’t keep it longer than a week. Sure, it’ll be tempting. I mean, it will grant you almost unlimited power. But if you possess it too long, it will consume you. Learn its secrets quickly and pass it on. Hide it for the next person, the way Sadie and I did for you. Then be prepared for your life to get very interesting.

Okay, Sadie is telling me to stop stalling and get on with the story. Fine. I guess it started in London, the night our dad blew up the British Museum.

Interested? Now here’s the blurb:

Since their mother’s death, Carter and Sadie have become near strangers. While Sadie has lived with her grandparents in London, her brother has traveled the world with their father, the brilliant Egyptologist, Dr. Julius Kane.

One night, Dr. Kane brings the siblings together for a “research experiment” at the British Museum, where he hopes to set things right for his family. Instead, he unleashes the Egyptian god Set, who banishes him to oblivion and forces the children to flee for their lives.

Soon, Sadie and Carter discover that the gods of Egypt are waking, and the worst of them–Set–has his sights on the Kanes. To stop him, the siblings embark on a dangerous journey across the globe — a quest that brings them ever closer to the truth about their family, and their links to a secret order that has existed since the time of the pharaohs.

My thoughts:

I really enjoyed the first page of this book, and the second half of this book. The first half was just overwhelming. I couldn’t connect with the characters at first because there was so much going on, and so many characters and settings, and world building stuff thrown at me that I just didn’t care all that much.

But I persisted because I remember having the same problem with the first Percy Jackson book, and now I love that series. Riordan is a fantastic writer, but beginnings that engage me don’t seem to be his strong suit. It’s hard to get invested in a character or their world when you don’t understand it. Granted, his characters don’t get his worlds either at first, but I don’t know them well enough to be good agents into the story. I’m glad I stuck with it because the second half of the book was amazing. The protagonists, siblings Sadie and Carter Kane did grow on me and I can’t wait to see what happens next.

Paranormal Reading Challenge

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I’ve signed up for another one! Sorry, but these seem fun. Read along with me.

The following guidelines come from this blog:

http://megantalksbooks.blogspot.com/p/2013-tour-of-paranormal-reading.html

Welcome to the 2013 Paranormal Reading Challenge hosted by Megan Likes Books and Auntie Spinelli Reads! There are so many awesome sub-genres of paranormal books, that it’s easy to find one you like and stick with it. So that’s why I decided to make a reading challenge with the goal of reading about all kinds of paranormal creatures.

The goal is to read one book featuring each of the following paranormal creatures:

Vampires
Werewolves/Shifters
Fey
Angels/Nephilim
Mermaids
Dragons
Zombies
Demons
Witches/Wizards
Ghosts
Aliens
Other (ie: sirens, unicorns, centaurs, timetravel etc.)

Guidelines:
1. This challenge runs from January 1, 2013 to December 31, 2013.
2. You must have a blog to able to participate, since reviews must be added to the linky.
3. When you sign up with the linky, please put the link to your post about joining the Paranormal Reading Challenge.
4. You’re welcome to list your books beforehand or just add as you go.
5. Sign-ups are open until December 1, 2013
6. At the beginning of each month, I will post a kick-start post, each month featuring a different category of paranormal creature. This post will also include a linky to include your reviews from that month.
7. Each review you link will qualify you for an entry into the monthy giveaway and if your review includes the feature paranormal creature of that month, you get a bonus entry.
8. Each book can only count for one category, even if it contains more than one paranormal creature. For example, Twilight contains both vampires and werewolves, but you can’t use it for both the vampires and werewolves/shifters categories.
9. Everyone who completes the challenge will be entered into a grand prize giveaway at the end of the year.
10. If you read multiple books from one category, feel free to add them to the linkies. Don’t stop at just one!
11. Book can count for other challenges.

Its pretty late in the year, but luckily, I’ve read a few of these that can count. Book titles link back to the reviews.

January – Vampires– Ever After by Kim Harrison. There are vampires in it.
February – Angels/Nephilim– Angelfall by Susan E.E
March – Fey — Glass Frost by Liz DeJesus, it has fairies in it. Review to come
April – Demons– The Soul Screamers series by Rachel Vincent
May – Aliens– I’m counting the Mistborn series for this one as their planet is located in a different place than this one 😉
June – Zombies– Delirium series by Lauren Oliver (review to come) What? They even call the lobotomized people zombies, it works.
July – Witches and Wizards
August – Mermaids
September – Dragons
October – Ghosts
November – Werewolves/Shape-shifters
December – Other

Fairy Tale and Myth Retelling Challenge

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This looks fun! I’m a bit late to the party, but the idea is to read as many fairy tales and mythology retellings as you can within a year and write reviews to them each month.

Here’s the rules…. the official sign up is here: http://anarmchairbythesea.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/announcing-telling-tales-challenge-2013.html

The challenge runs from January 1st, 2013 to December 31st, 2013. You can sign up at any point throughout the year.
Again, any genre counts as long as it is in some way related to fairytale and/or mythology. Once again, if you are unsure, as long as you can make an argument for its’ inclusion, it counts!
Re-reads count, and you are more than welcome to overlap books with other challenges.
Please leave me your email address in the comments if you want to participate (I promise not to harrass you, it’s just so that people get a reminder every now and again about the monthly link ups, and also so I can contact you for competitions etc).
Please link up your reviews every month in the posts which will go up on this blog.
In your sign up post, please indicate the level you aim to complete. You are entirely welcome to change this as the year progresses. You can make your lists beforehand, or as you go. Whichever you prefer!
When you sign up, please leave the link to your sign up post, rather than just to your blog in general.
You don’t have to have a blog to participate – you can review on Goodreads, Amazon, wherever, just let me know where you will be reviewing!
That’s it!

The levels are as follows:

Pixie – read 2 books
Troll under the Bridge – read 5 books
Princess – read 10 books
Prince Charming – read 15 books
Evil Queen – read 20 books
Dragon – read 30 books
King/Queen of the Silver Screen – read any number of books and watch the film adaptations

.

I’m going for Princess level. My first book will be Persephone’s Orchard and that review will be posted this Thursday 🙂

Mythology Monday: Guest Post- Molly Ringle’s version of Persephone

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We’re taking a break from Hercules for a very special guest post from author Molly Ringle. She wrote her own version of the Persephone myth in a book called Persephone’s Orchard (wordpress won’t let me underline for some reason so lets see if italics works). I’ll include her version of the myth first, then a bit about the book. Tune in Thursday for a review of Persephone’s Orchard

Molly Ringle’s Version of Persephone:

There is no single “original” myth for Persephone and Hades, nor for most of the other myths. We have a variety of surviving sources, often with varying and conflicting details. What I’ll tell here draws from various versions, though predominantly from the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, one of the earlier sources we know about.

One day Hades, the lonesome and grim god of the Underworld, caught sight of Persephone, a goddess of spring and daughter of the gods Demeter and Zeus, and fell promptly in love with her. Deciding he must have her, he dispensed with the usual introductions, and abducted her from the field where she was picking flowers. He caused the earth to split open, and dragged her down into its depths in his chariot pulled by black horses. The chasm then closed again, and Persephone officially became a missing person in the world above.

Her mother Demeter went wild with grief at the disappearance of her daughter, and while racing around looking for her, dropped her duties of making the Earth fertile and healthy. The weather went cold; the land went barren; people began to starve. This was, apparently, the first instance of winter. And no one liked it. So once Zeus figured out where Persephone had disappeared to, he insisted upon her return, for otherwise Demeter would refuse to save the Earth, and humanity would freeze and starve to death.

Persephone was happy to see the messenger Hermes come to the Underworld to summon her back, but it turned out her return to the surface would only be temporary. She had eaten a pomegranate seed from the land of the dead (the Homeric Hymn says Hades slipped it straight into her mouth, sneakily), and was therefore obliged to return to the Underworld for part of every year. She honors this obligation, and this is why winter, too, returns to Earth each year.

Queen of the Underworld

It’s a horrible thing, a woman being kidnapped and trapped into a marriage in the land of the dead. We can all agree on that. What has always interested me, though, is how it doesn’t resemble the average kidnapping. Hades doesn’t tie Persephone up and throw her in a closet and abuse her. Quite the contrary. Instead, he gives her new powers. He makes her queen of the realm. He tells her she can punish anyone who doesn’t properly worship her, in any way she sees fit. And he asks her, please, to think of him kindly, and to consider that he’s not such a bad guy as husbands go.

It all still sounds a bit psychotic from our modern point of view, but nonetheless, in his possibly twisted way, he loves her, and honestly wants her to love him. That’s the point that has stuck with me all these years, and made me (like hundreds of other writers) come up with a version of the story that gives their relationship a fair chance at happiness.

My changes to the myth

My story, Persephone’s Orchard, uses somewhat less magic than the old myths, in which the gods can do virtually anything they wish by a wave of the hand. I love the myths, but I find it easier to plot stories where magic is limited and can’t solve everything, so I tempered the magic to a few key abilities and places. The Underworld is certainly a place of magic, where even the plants growing there (for example, pomegranate trees) exhibit properties that their living-world counterparts do not. But my immortals are nearly regular humans in most ways, other than exhibiting unusual strength and longevity. As with vampires, you can kill them if you try really hard, so they do have to be on the lookout for anti-immortal vigilantes. (But, unlike most vampires, the gods in my story are warm to the touch. And, no, they don’t sparkle. Unless they’re wearing lots of those beautiful Underworld gemstones.)

But perhaps the most important change I made, as hinted at already, was to remove the majority of the non-consensual portions of the myth of Persephone and Hades. Instead I have a Hades less prone to kidnapping, and a Persephone who’s actively curious about that dark and forbidden place called the Underworld, and who chooses to visit there, against her mother’s wishes. And that which is forbidden is always so much more tempting.

About her Book:

The Greek gods never actually existed. Did they? Sophie Darrow finds she was wrong about that assumption when she’s pulled into the spirit realm, complete with an Underworld, on her first day at college. Adrian, the mysterious young man who brought her there, simply wants her to taste a pomegranate. Soon, though she returns to her regular life, her mind begins exploding with dreams and memories of ancient times; of a love between two Greeks named Persephone and Hades. But lethal danger has always surrounded the immortals, and now that she’s tainted with the Underworld’s magic, that danger is drawing closer to Sophie.

* * *
Molly Ringle has been writing fiction for over twenty years. With her intense devotion to silly humor, she was especially proud to win the grand prize in the 2010 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest with one (intentionally) terrible sentence. Molly grew up in the Pacific Northwest, and lives in Seattle with her husband and children. Her studies include a bachelor of arts in anthropology and a master of arts in linguistics. She was a Tri-Delta in college, in an old sorority house that was supposedly haunted, which inspired some of the central ideas for The Ghost Downstairs. She also loves folklore and mythology, and is working on new novels about the Greek myths. Persephone’s Orchard is the first in the series. When not writing, she can often be found experimenting with fragrances, chocolate, and gardening.

Website: http://mollyringle.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MollyRingle
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/2905269.Molly_Ringle
Twitter: https://twitter.com/mollyringle
Blog: http://lemonlye.livejournal.com/

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Thursday Review: Devil Bones by Kathy Reichs

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The Blurb: Following her most successful book to date, Kathy Reichs — international number one bestselling author, forensic anthropologist, and producer of the Fox television hit “Bones” — returns to Charlotte, North Carolina, where Temperance Brennan encounters a deadly mix of voodoo, Santeria, and devil worship in her quest to identify two young victims.In a house under renovation, a plumber uncovers a cellar no one knew about, and makes a rather grisly discovery — a decapitated chicken, animal bones, and cauldrons containing beads, feathers, and other relics of religious ceremonies. In the center of the shrine, there is the skull of a teenage girl. Meanwhile, on a nearby lakeshore, the headless body of a teenage boy is found by a man walking his dog.

Nothing is clear — neither when the deaths occurred, nor where. Was the skull brought to the cellar or was the girl murdered there? Why is the boy’s body remarkably well preserved? Led by a preacher turned politician, citizen vigilantes blame devil worshippers and Wiccans. They begin a witch hunt, intent on seeking revenge.

Forensic anthropologist Temperance Brennan — “five-five, feisty, and forty-plus” — is called in to investigate, and a complex and gripping tale unfolds in this, Kathy Reichs’s eleventh taut, always surprising, scientifically fascinating mystery.

With a popular series on Fox — now in its third season and in full syndication — Kathy Reichs has established herself as the dominant talent in forensic mystery writing. “Devil Bones” features Reichs’s signature blend of forensic descriptions that “chill to the bone” (“Entertainment Weekly”) and the surprising plot twists that have made her books phenomenal bestsellers in the United States and around the world.(

My thoughts:
Okay, so I’m officially moving on from free books picked up at book exchanges and sticking with books in genres I know I like. But the thing is, I thought I would like this one. I like mysteries, I like medical thrillers. This book seemed like it would be an awesome combination of both. It’s not that it’s not enough like the show Bones, it may not be, but I don’t watch that show so the disappointment couldn’t stem from that.

I just didn’t like the writing style. Entire conversations passed like this.

He asked me how it went. I told him. He said that’s too bad. I said I know.

Not “how did it go?”
“Meh, not so great,” I said bringing it up to speed.
“Too bad.” He shook his head and gave me a sympathetic look.

Nope, entire conversations told in summary that included what the characters said verbatim. Why? That doesn’t shorten anything. And it wasn’t just when she was catching up people on events. This happened to.

I picked up the phone and said hello. He sounded upset when he said hello. I asked what was wrong. He told me xyz had happened on the station. Oh, I responded. That is upsetting. We talked for a few more minutes before he said goodbye. I hung up the phone.

Arg! She has an eleven book contract (at least) in PRINT and a TV show. What?!

Every single chapter ended with a “If I’d only paid attention to xyz, I could have prevented so much pain.”

Seriously! That kind of “foreshadowing” is just lazy.

There was tons of “intro to xyz” info dumps. Whether it be aspects of forensics or the tenants of religions. Then the protagonist would have a conversation where she reiterated every single fact from the pages of info dumping. I would have rather just had the conversations. I’m glad she researched stuff, but I really didn’t feel the need for a wikipedia type entry on every single thing she looked up down to random bands. I also felt like it was hitting me over the head with morals. You know, I never considered Wiccan’s to be satanists before this book, but thanks for repeatedly assuming I’m a bigot. I would say that she trying to teach another character or make some self-discovery, but the protagonist never really seemed to think there was a link between Satan and wicca either and it was exposition not dialogue so who else could the writer be trying to convince. To see THAT type of mini-moral packed into a story well, I recommend reading Dime Store Magic by Kelley Armstrong.

Apparently this was book 11 in the series, so I guess one good thing is that I was able to pick up the book and make sense of it without the rest of the series. But I won’t be reading anymore by this author.