Gods Behaving Badly
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Average customer review:Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #38953 in Books
- Published on: 2008-05-29
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 288 pages
Editorial Reviews
Independent on Sunday
'A clever and inventive tale'
The Bookseller
`A sheer delight from the very start...an impressive debut'
The Daily Telegraph
'What makes the novel stand out - and it really does stand out -
is its originality and lightness of touch.'
Customer Reviews
Brilliant, witty and extremely entertaining!
I walked past this book in Waterstones and immediately felt the urge to pick it up. I am currently ploughing my way through Bullfynches Mythology and therefore could not resist the urge to scan the first few pages.
The first paragraph alone told me that I had to own this book and see how Marie Phillips manages to weave the ancient into the 21st Century.
The book is fantastically entertaining and an enthralling read. I read the book in less than 10 hours as I was caught up in each and every twist and turn of the plot.
Anyone who loves mythology would be amused by the way that Phillips uses the traditional element of tragedy so often the basis of Greek mythology in this 21st Century version.
For anyone who struggles to remember which god does what and who is related to whom - this book is a godsend. Artemis, Apollo, Eros et al come alive in such a way that you can vividly imagine living in a modern world where the great gods of Olympus walk past you every day.
Get it! Read it! Enjoy it!
A Fine, Fun Read
Nestling uncomfortably under a brightly block-coloured cover with a cute, handwriting-effect title, this book understandably led a friend of mine to ask, "Are you reading a chick-lit?" While Gods Behaving Badly has a light-hearted, gently ironic tone that wouldn't be out of place in a Bridget Jones book or the like, and comes complete with a happy rom-com ending, it's poorly served by its presentation.
The ancient Greek gods have lived in London since the 1660s. Their power is diminishing (suggesting that they are finally succumbing to age and at risk of dying), they miss being important and adored, and they're heartily sick of each other, until Apollo, through a thoughtless act of cruelty to a mortal and a trivial slight against Aphrodite, unintentionally sets off a chain of events that radically affects them, the world and the lives of a small handful of mortals that wander unwittingly into their affairs.
To be fair, I love this kind of thing. Neil Gaiman does it all the time, and I lap it up. But Philips has an engaging approach to it. For one thing, while Gaiman's gods are very post-modern, more or less integrated into the modern world while self-consciously referencing ancient archetypes, Philips' gods are the real deal and couldn't give an arse about anything that happened after about 300 BCE. For another, while most other contemporary fantasies about the gods are more or less ecumenical - every god that people believe in is simultaneously real, and therefore none of their claims of absolute primacy are entirely valid - in Gods Behaving Badly the Greek gods are the really, absolutely, real gods and everyone else before and since has been wrong. Even (and especially) the Christians, who are therefore in for something of a shock given that they represent a clear majority (although, in a particularly fine nod to absurdism, Eros is a Christian in spite of knowing with certainty that the Christian God isn't actually real).
The story itself, while very modern and very natural, is also a perfect Greek divine myth, straight out of Ovid or Herodotus; a petty squabble between Gods ends up being a matter of life and death to several mortals; someone dies, there is a journey to the Underworld, and the day is ultimately saved by courage and virtue more than by power or guile.
The style is pacy, immersive and fun. Philips manages most of the writing in a light banter that captures the utter thoughtlessness of the Gods (and the banality of the particular mortals in question) perfectly, interspersed with some fine sections of more sober prose when suited and one or two pieces of grotesque black comedy that actually made me laugh out loud.
A fine, fun read. Well worth the day or two it'll take to read.
A must read!
I really enjoyed this book from beginning till end. Full of pleasant surprises and witty tricks, it really succeeds to convince the reader - even one who is quite familiar with Greek mythology and has been extensively taught about Olympian gods in their school years - that they live somewhere in London. Funny, clever, fresh, gripping, imaginative, quite accurate (the author knows what she is talking about), perfectly adopted in our times, with arguments that is difficult to fight against. I was a bit afraid that the end of it would disappoint me - but no, it was just right - and i had not guessed!! I loved the references to films and the familiarity of the scenes - i always thought that Angel's tube station escalators were leading up to surface from deep deep down! A must read!!!!




