This book just released on the 5th and it was a must have for me. It's a little longer and I've been working, so I couldn't devour it in a day like I wanted to. But it is SO GOOD.
The premise is that the Greek (and other) deities actually exist. Zeus got pissed at them centuries ago and created the Agon. Once every seven years, certain deities become mortal and can be hunted and killed by the bloodlines of various heroes. If you kill a god, you take their power and become the new version of them.
So this hunt has been going on for ages and the story is set in the modern age. It centers on Lore (short for Melora), who is the last of her Perseus line. She thinks she's escaped from the horrors of the Agon and the life of the Blooded, but she gets roped back into it when the goddess Athena comes to her for help.
I loved this so much that I'm not going to spoil much of anything at all, so not many plot details here. I liked a lot of the characters, but discussing them is also spoilery.
I will say that if you liked Harry Potter, Percy Jackson, Hunger Games, Divergent, and other teens save the world-type of novels, you'll want to check this out. It's definitely more mature than those series. It's got world-building that reminds me of Game of Thrones. Game of Thrones lite maybe. I mean, the book is nowhere near Martin's typical A Song of Ice and Fire lengths. But the different bloodline houses are definitely reminiscent of GoT, as well as a lot of the more antiquated viewpoints that the Blooded are stuck in.
If you're curious about the Bloodlines, they're descendants of Herakles, Cadmus, Perseus, Odysseus, Jason, Theseus, Achilles, Bellerophon, and Meleager.
There is definitely a lot of misogyny in the story. It's blended into the world of the Blooded. Women aren't supposed to ever kill the gods and take their powers. They're not supposed to be the archons of the houses. They can fight and several are hunters or "lionesses" who fight for their archons but won't take the killing blow. There are also some traditions that still remain from the old days, like having groups of young girls in each house for breeding purposes and marrying at the fabulous age of...twelve. So yeah, expect misogyny. It's presented as a bad thing, so don't think it's not, but there's some uncomfortable stuff here. Lore even addresses it with Athena, asking her why she never mentored a female hero and questioning her about the Medusa myth. My only nitpick about this is that there's a bit of backstory where Lore's a sexual assault survivor. It almost plays into her character more than coming home and finding her parents and little sisters murdered. I feel like it could easily have been taken out and not changed the story at all. The trauma of her family's murder is enough to drive Lore. She doesn't have to be an assault survivor, too. Not to say those aren't traumatic events, but they're so often used as character development or defining features of strong female characters. It's a trope to have rape or sexual assault be part of a female lead's tragic past. You don't see male leads with rape as part of theirs, so why is it so often used for women? I honestly liked everything about the book except that one bit.
Speaking of female heroes, they could easily have included Atalanta instead of Meleager. I don't recall her even being mentioned. Hmm.
The whole thing reads like an action movie. I could see this easily being turned into a series. I don't think a single movie would do it justice. I definitely give it a very high recommendation.
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