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Divine might : goddesses in Greek myth / Natalie Haynes.

Divine might : goddesses in Greek myth / Natalie Haynes.
Item Information
Shelf Location Collection Volume Ref. Branch Status Due Date
398.2 HAY
Adult Non Fiction   Adult Lending . Available .  
. Catalogue Record 700039637 ItemInfo Beginning of record . Catalogue Record 700039637 ItemInfo Top of page .
Catalogue Information
Field name Details
ISBN 9781529089493 (paperback)
Classification 398.2 HAY
Personal Name Haynes, Natalie
Title Divine might : goddesses in Greek myth / Natalie Haynes.
Production & Copyright Details London : Picador, 2023.
©2023
Physical Description 290 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Content type text
still image
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Summary Note Bestselling author Natalie Haynes returns to the world of Greek myth she so wittily explored in Pandora's Jar and turns her focus on Olympus itself - not on the gods, who have had far more attention than they deserve over the millennia since these stories were first told, but on the goddesses. Here we meet Athene, who sprang fully formed from her father's brow (giving Zeus a killer headache in the process), goddess of war, guardian of the city named for her and sacred to her, and provider of wise counsel. Here, too, is Aphrodite, born of the foam (or, some sources say, sperm released from a castrated Titan's testicles), the most beautiful of all the Olympian goddesses, dispensing desire and inspiring longing - but with a nasty line in brutal punishment of those who displeased her. And then there is Hera, Zeus's long-suffering wife, whose jealousy of his repeated dalliances with mortals, with nymphs, with other goddesses, led her to wreak elaborate and often painful revenge on those she felt had wronged her. Well, wouldn't you? We also meet Demeter, goddess of the harvest and mother of the hapless Persephone; Artemis, the huntress, virgin goddess of childbirth (Greek myth is full of confusion); the Muses, all nine of them; wide-bosomed Gaia, the earth goddess; and Hestia, goddess of domesticity but also of sacrificial fire.
Subject - Topical Term Goddesses, Greek
Mythology, Greek
.
Catalogue Information 700039637 Beginning of record . Catalogue Information 700039637 Top of page .