Skip to main content

Medea (Book 1 of the Delphic Women Series) by Kerry Greenwood: A Book Review

Medea (Book 1 of the Delphic Women Series)
Author: Kerry Greenwood
Genre: Historical fiction, Fantasy
Publisher: Poisoned Pen Press
Release Date: 2013
Pages: 431
Source: My State Public Library
Synopsis: We know Medea killed her children . . . or do we?

     In Medea, the first novel in her Delphic Woman series, Kerry Greenwood breathes fresh life into the age of heroes and rescues a woman wronged by ancient playwrights and history.

     Princess Medea’s destiny is bound up with passion, quests, power, murder, voyages, prophecies, and broken oaths. As priestess of Hekate--the Dark Mother, Queen of the Lost, Lady of Changes--Medea protects the sacred grove holding the Golden Fleece and bones of an old king. Jason arrives determined to acquire both and rule the land.

     The King sets up challenges which Jason must conquer to earn the throne. But Jason’s gentian blue eyes and hair bright as gold thread obsess Medea--”here is love, here is joy”--compelling her to help him master wild bulls and lure the great serpent guarding the fleece into sleep. Then the king breaks his word and seeks to kill the two, who escape together.

     Through Medea’s royal line, Jason becomes king of Corinth, swearing always to love his wife and queen. But his allegiance is fleeting. Not even their four children can save their union. Medea has sacrificed home, family, goddess, and innocence for the “melting, fiery loving” she feels for him.

     What comes next? The answer lies in this compelling story of tragedy, vengeance, exile, grief, change, and an oracle’s response to one returning to worship the dark after having fallen in love with the light.

     My Review: Medea has been known to us through Greek playwrights, most famously Euripides, for killing her children after her husband Jason of the Argonauts have abandoned her for another woman. However, in Kerry Greenwood’s version of Medea, Medea has given her voice to speak and narrates her version of what happened. This Medea does not kill her own children. Rather it was the city of Corinth who killed them, and thus bestowed a great curse over the city.

     Medea is a princess of Colchis and a priestess of Hekate, the Dark Mother. She spent some time with the Scythians, and Iranic equestrian tribes, and learns about the customs. When she comes back to Colchis she finds that a stranger named Jason and his group of fellow Argonauts have come to demand her father, Aetes the King of Colchis to give the Greeks back the city’s most treasured Golden Fleece, and the bones of Phrixos’s, Jason’s grandfather and rider of the the Flying Golden Ram, whom he sacrificed in honor of Zeus. Aetes agrees to give Jason what he has asked for, but intends to not honor that agreement and plans to kill Jason. Medea, who is instantly infatuated with Jason, decides to betray her father to help save his life, gets the objects he has demanded, and leave with Jason to become his wife and queen.

     Medea is portrayed as a strong and wise woman. She is expressed to be independent. However, when she arrives in Greece, she is a foreigner and not accustomed to their ways and is instantly hated. She is portrayed as a woman, who will do anything to keep the love of Jason, even to kill the evil tyrants who stand in the way of Jason being king. However, despite the dark deeds, there is always room for redemption, which is Medea’s ultimate quest. Jason is portrayed as weak and stupid. He is a failure as a leader and cannot make smart decisions. Rather, he depends on other people to make decisions for him. There is also a second narrator, Nauplios, a fellow Argonaut and best friend of Jason, who tells the adventures of the Argonauts.

     Overall, this is a story of betrayals, deceits, murder, and broken love. But there is also renewal, second chances, hope, and, most of all, redemption. The message in the book is that anyone can be redeemed, and there is always hope. I recommend this not only to anyone who is interested in fantasy and Greek mythology, but to anyone who is going through a rough time, and feels hopeless. If a woman like Medea can be redeemed, there is always hope for you!

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

Comments

  1. Not sure about this one; I wonder just where the balance goes between fantasy and mythology? Of course, as long as it retains the key points of the mythological story, then perhaps it could be worthwhile reading.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is a mythological story. It is a re-telling of the myth, but it is told in a feminist perspective. It follows the myth very faithfully. I just put it as a fantasy genre because myths have a lot of fantasy elements. For instance, I would put Homer's Odyssey in a as a fantasy because of their elements. For in the Odyssey, it has monsters, giants, and magic.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Yes, I suppose you are right, Lauralee; there is a sort of merging at the edges, isn't there?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Jocasta: The Mother-Wife of Oedipus by Victoria Grossack and Alice Underwood: A Book Review

Jocasta: The Mother-Wife of Oedipus Author: Victoria Grossack, Alice Underwood Genre: Historical Fiction, Fantasy Publisher: CreateSpace Release Date: 2010 Pages: 262 Source: My personal collection Synopsis: Young and beautiful, born to a powerful family, Jocasta is destined to become Queen of Thebes... trapped in a loveless marriage, she cannot save her firstborn child from her husband's wrath... left alone on the throne after her husband's death, she must contend with the dangerous Sphinx and contrive a plan to protect her city...charmed by a foreign prince, she does not know she is falling in love with her own son... My Review: Oedipus is one of the most tragic stories in Greek mythology. The myth explains that one cannot escape one’s fate. This novel retells the myth, but through Jocasta’s eyes. Jocasta is also a victim of fate. No matter how powerful she is as a queen of Thebes, she was powerless in preventing her own horrific destiny from coming true.      ...

Iceberg by Jennifer A. Nielsen: A Book Review

  Iceberg Author: Jennifer A. Nielsen Genre: Children, Historical Fiction, Mystery, Adventure Publisher: Scholastic Release Date: March 7, 2023 Pages: 317 Source: My State Public Library Synopsis : As disaster looms on the horizon, a young stowaway onboard the Titanic will need all her courage and wits to stay alive. A thrilling tale from New York Times bestselling author Jennifer A. Nielsen!     Hazel Rothbury is traveling all alone from her home in England aboard the celebrated ship Titanic . Following the untimely death of her father, Hazel’s mother is sending her to the US to work in a factory, so that she might send money back home to help her family make ends meet.     But Hazel harbors a secret dream: She wants to be a journalist, and she just knows that if she can write and sell a story about the Titanic ’s maiden voyage, she could earn enough money to support her family and not have to go to a sweatshop. When Hazel discovers that m...

Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman by Stefan Zweig: A Book Review

Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman Author: Stefan Zweig Genre: Nonfiction, History, Biography Publisher: Pushkin Press Release Date: 2010 Pages: 590 Source: Edelweiss/Publisher in exchange for an honest review. Synopsis: Life at the court of Louis XVI and Marie Antoinette has long captivated readers, drawn by accounts of the intrigues and pageantry that came to such a sudden and unexpected end. Stefan Zweig's Marie Antoinette: The Portrait of an Average Woman is a dramatic account of the guillotine's most famous victim, from the time when as a fourteen-year-old she took Versailles by storm, to her frustrations with her aloof husband, her passionate love affair with the Swedish Count von Fersen, and ultimately to the chaos of the French Revolution and the savagery of the Terror. An impassioned narrative, Zweig's biography focuses on the human emotions of the participants and victims of the French Revolution, making it both an engrossingly compelling r...