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Legends, Myths & Fables - General & Miscellaneous, Fiction - Fantasy & Magic, Teen Fiction - Fantasy
We Goddesses : Athena, Aphrodite, Hera by Doris Orgel, Marilee Heyer β€” book cover

We Goddesses : Athena, Aphrodite, Hera

by Doris Orgel, Marilee Heyer
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Overview

Doris Orgel has written two other books inspired by mythology: The Princess and the God and Ariadne, Awake! Her well-known novel The Devil in Vienna was the 1998n Honor Book in the Phoenix Awards. She lives in New York City and has begun a second volume about mythic mothers and daughters: Leto and Artemis, Demeter, and Persephone.""Marilee Heyer has written and illustrated The Weaving of a Dream; The Forbidden Door (based on a portfolio of drawings done for a Lucasfilm project); and two retellings, Iron Hans, from the Brothers Grimm, and The Girl, the Fish, and the Crown, from a Spanish fairy tale. She lives in Los Osos, California.""

Three Greek goddesses, Athena, Aphrodite, and Hera, tell their own stories. Includes information about Greek society and religion.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Orgel (The Princess and the God; Ariadne, Awake!) again offers an original approach to Greek mythology. In a meaty and extended introduction, she outlines her feminist perspective, pointing out the low status of girls and women in ancient Greece and then recalling her own thwarted girlhood appetite for goddess stories ("Too few! too short!"). She lets Athena, Aphrodite and Hera narrate their own life stories. Athena, goddess of wisdom, most clearly questions patriarchal notions; for example, just after she joins the company on Mount Olympus, she is puzzled to hear Zeus speak of Athens as "the foremost city of men" ("Won't women live there too, and children?" she asks). Aphrodite, goddess of love, delivers the least involving narrative; she seems more vain than erotic. By contrast, the section on the goddess of marriage, Hera, offers the most provocative spin. This Hera admits that "quite often" she is "jealous, angry, vengeful." But her account of her marriage to the faithless Zeus makes readers understand her bad behavior and appreciate her marital fidelity. Orgel pays close attention to the judgment of Paris (Paris's choice of Aphrodite as the fairest goddess led to the Trojan War, as Orgel shows). In an epilogue, the goddesses have resolved their differences and none wants to repeat the contest--perhaps an overly optimistic ending, but indicative of the volume's idealism. Heyer's (The Weaving of a Dream) illustrations are oddly conventional; their pretty representations, paradoxically, undercut the vigor of Orgel's bold interpretations. Ages 10-14. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1999
Publisher
Dorling Kindersley Publishing
Pages
144
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780789425867

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