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Title details for The Hymn to Dionysus by Natasha Pulley - Wait list

The Hymn to Dionysus

ebook
Pre-release: Expected March 18, 2025
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: Not available
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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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 6, 2025
      This fresh and stylish reimagining of the myth of Dionysus from Pulley (The Mars House) follows Phaidros Heliades, who, trained as a knight in the Theban army from childhood, grows up traveling all over the region with his regiment and his commander, Helios Poly. At age four, he and Helios visit Helios’s sister, Queen Agave, where Phaidros discovers an abandoned baby—an encounter that ends in tragedy. Years later, Phaidros fails to protect a boy at sea, another tragedy. As an adult, Phaidros is stationed in Thebes and suffering from PTSD that manifests in flashbacks to the battle of Troy. He longs for the boy from the sea to return and take his revenge, a fate he believes to be inevitable. Despite his deep depression, he becomes entangled in the lives of the city’s young prince and the queen, and with an enigmatic witch named Dionysus, who seems to appear around every corner. As drought, famine, and madness overtake the city, Phaidros is torn between the duty that has always been the driving factor in his life and the humanity he’s learned to bury inside. In her singular voice, Pulley crafts a nuanced story that enthralls the reader until the very last page. Fans of Greek myth retellings won’t want to miss this one. Agent: Jenny Savill, Andrew Nurnberg Assoc.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from February 1, 2025
      A fantasy novelist reimagines the myth of Dionysus. Pulley's intricately plotted fantasy novels have explored the past couple hundred years, the near(ish) future, and alternate versions of both. In her new novel, she goes back millennia further to Bronze Age Thebes. The protagonist, Phaidros, is one of the Sown, an elite fighting force named after knights said to have sprouted from a dragon's teeth. The Sown are organized in pairs: a commander and his ward, whom he raises and trains, then sometimes marries. (Married couples and devoted family pairs will fight like the gods to keep each other alive, the thinking goes.) Phaidros' commander is Helios, a royal prince. When Queen Agave, Helios' sister, tries to kill their other sister's blue-eyed baby nephew (said to be a son of Zeus, but that's what people always say about illegitimate children), 5-year-old Phaidros helps Helios whisk the entrancing baby away to safety. Years later, Phaidros encounters a blue-eyed adolescent who turns sailors into dolphins, and then--years later yet--a blue-eyed man named Dionysus who makes fruit and vines grow in the middle of a drought. Are they the same person? Is this the illegitimate prince come back for revenge? Is his father really Zeus, after all? Is he a god himself, or just an ordinary witch (a magical healer)? Is it safe for Phaidros to love him? Must Phaidros choose between compassion and duty--and will he choose right? Pulley brings out her favorite elements--palace intrigue, gallant lovers, masks, transformations, ambiguity, automata--and twists them into mesmerizing patterns. Though she draws extensively on mythological source material, the novel feels more like fantasy than the myth-come-to-life realism of retellings such as those by Madeline Miller. This love story is witty, bittersweet, surprising, and compellingly readable.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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