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Hymn to Dionysus
Hymn to Dionysus | Natasha Pulley
1 post | 1 read | 2 to read
A timely reimagining of the story of Dionysus-Greek god of ecstasy, revelry, and ruin-and a captivating queer love story for readers of The Song of Achilles and Elektra. Raised in a Greek legion, Phaidros has been taught to follow his commander's orders at all costs. But when Phaidros rescues a baby from a fire at Thebes's palace, his commander's orders cease to make sense: Phaidros is forced to abandon the blue-eyed boy at a temple, and to keep the baby's existence a total secret. Years later, struggling with panic attacks and flashbacks, Phaidros is enlisted by the Queen to find her son, Thebes' young crown prince, who has vanished to escape an arranged marriage. The search leads him to a blue-eyed witch named Dionysus, whose guidance is as wise as the events that surround him are strange. In Dionysus's company, Phaidros witnesses sudden outbursts of riots and unrest, and everywhere Dionysus goes, rumors follow about a new god, one sired by Zeus but lost in a fire. In The Hymn to Dionysus, bestselling author Natasha Pulley transports us to an ancient empire on the edge of ruin to tell an utterly captivating queer love story about a man needing a god to remind him how to be a human.
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review
pdxannie
Hymn to Dionysus | Natasha Pulley
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Mehso-so

Throughout this book I considered not finishing it. It was slow. Enjoyable enough to hang on but I doubt it will be memorable (if it turns out it is, I‘ll revise my rating). At times, more in the first half than the second, the cadence would completely mind fuck me and I‘d have to reread a sentence several times to understand it. I never truly understood why the cadence would change, but it was annoying to say the least.