It’s #PoseidonWeek at andrewjpeterswrites.com!

 

Portrait of Andrea Doria as Neptune by Angelo Bronzino. Retrieved from Wikipedia Commons.

Portrait of Andrea Doria as Neptune by Angelo Bronzino. Retrieved from Wikipedia Commons.

It’s Poseidon Week here at andrewjpeterswrites.com! From Monday, August 29th to Thursday, September 1st, I’ll be posting stories, images, and interesting facts about the famous trident-wielder to celebrate the August 29th release of Poseidon and Cleito exclusively on Amazon. You’ll also find excerpts and some extras from the book. And I’m running a contest. Drop a comment, like, or share any post on my website, or my Facebook page, and you’ll be entered into a raffle for Poseidon swag provided by Zazzle. Winners will be chosen Thursday, September 1st 9:00PM EST.

So what is it you could win? Your very own Poseidon t-shirt, Poseidon mug, or Poseidon notebook. Winners will need to provide their e-mail address and mailing address for shipping.

For today’s post, I thought I’d share some of my thoughts about Poseidon and some lesser known stories about him. Poseidon was never my very favorite personage from Greek mythology. Growing up, I was more drawn to the heroic tales of Jason, Perseus, and Theseus. When I came out as gay, I found new favorites in the stories of Zeus and Ganymede, and Apollo and Hyacinth. But there was always something sympathetic for me about gloomy, aloof Poseidon.

He strikes me as a lonely guy, perhaps misunderstood, lashing out at mortals from some inner torment, whether borne from being overshadowed by his older brother Zeus or something else that was never elaborated on. Most of the Greek gods could be said to be moody and capricious in their sorting out of mortal matters, but it seemed particularly tough to get on

Poseidon’s good side. Being a natural skeptic, I’ve wondered if that was a fair portrayal.

Artemision Poseidon

“Artemision Zeus or Poseidon,” a famous 5th century BCE bronze statue at the Athens Museum of Archeology

An interesting thing about Greek mythology is that it changed throughout the eras, and most of what endured, what we recognize today, is from the classical era when Zeus and Athena were prominent and beloved. Some scholars believe that the worship of Poseidon was more widespread in earlier time periods and that his significance extended beyond an association with sea and storm. To people of an earlier age, he was probably a beneficent god of an earthly realm, worshiped for fertility and good harvests. Another matter is that the similarity in Poseidon and Zeus iconography makes it hard to determine which god was most popular among the Greeks, or whether they were both offshoots of a father god archetype.

Poseidon remained an important figure in religious practice and folklore throughout and beyond the classical period (and of course, many centuries forward via the Romans co-opting him as Neptune). But for the most part, he was portrayed as fearsome and villainous in the stories from the classical era. In Homer’s Odyssey, for example, Poseidon is an antagonist to the hero Odysseus, preventing the Trojan war hero from returning home to Ithaca in retribution for blinding his son Cyclops. Plato’s story about Poseidon’s kingdom Atlantis in his Critias and Timaeus dialogues has the patron god’s country destroyed by a morally and–one would have to argue–supernaturally superior Zeus.

The Marriage of Poseidon and Cleito

“The Marriage of Poseidon and Amphitrite” by Italian painter Felice Giani (image retrieved from Wikipedia Commons)

Poseidon and Cleito is a retelling of that legend, including the perspective of the woman Plato named as Poseidon’s wife. A more well-known wife of Poseidon’s from folkore is Amphitrite, who was a Nereid (a daughter of the archaic sea god Nereus), and a sea-goddess herself. Of more notoriety, Poseidon was said to have seduced or even raped the beautiful maiden Medusa in his sister Athena’s temple, which angered Athena so much, she transformed Medusa’s hair to serpents. The Greeks had little charity for women in their myths.

A point of contrast with Zeus: while his older brother was the father of some of the most popular heroes from Greek mythology (Perseus, Heracles), Poseidon was the father of some of the most well-known monsters, such as Polyphemos, also known as the Cyclops, and Charybdis, the female whirlpool monster, of the famous Scylla and Charybdis, aka “the rock and a hard place.”

One last bit of trivia, Poseidon had male lovers too. One particularly interesting story is that of Nerites, who was the handsome brother of the beautiful Nereids (sea nymphs). Both Aphrodite and Poseidon fell in love with Nerites, and the young man refused the love goddess and chose Poseidon, who made him his charioteer.

Let me know what you think about Poseidon by dropping a comment below, and I’ll enter you in the raffle for Poseidon swag!

 

Pick up Poseidon and Cleito for just $2.99 through this weekend

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Brought to you by the fabulously handsome Chris Hemsworth (or, I guess I should say his lovely public domain gif), this jaw-dropping announcement:

Just through Sunday, August 28th, you can buy my upcoming release Poseidon and Cleito at Amazon for the ridiculously low, pre-order price of $2.99!!

That’s like nothing. You probably spend more on your morning coffee. Next year, if you’re a New Yorker, you’ll probably spend more on a subway trip. It’s less than a 16 oz. package of Nutter Butter cookies at Walmart. Nutter butters make for a great snack while reading the story by the way.nutter-butter

So, how can Amazon afford to offer the book at such a low price, you might be asking? I have no idea. I’m not an economics major. I’m hardly versed in e-book marketing, and christ knows it feels like a chunk of my heart is being carved out with a scalpel when I think about the years it took me to write the book all costed out at the price of a medium-sized Tupperware container. But my guess is it has something to do with Amazon looking at the long-range gains if lots and lots of people buy the book and tell their friends, generating a tidal rush of buyers that will make them tons of money when the price goes up to $5.99 on August 29th.

What I see is a win/win situation. I mean, you probably don’t care about the fat cats at Amazon getting richer. So why not buy their product for three bucks less and really stick it to them?

Maybe that was a bit crass. Truly, the reason you should buy Poseidon and Cleito is it’s a great story about a man who becomes known as the god of storm and sea and his wife who the Greeks conveniently left out of his legend because, let’s face it, if you think male writers tend to be sexist today, that’s nothing compared to the way misogynists like Plato and Sophocles treated women back in the day. Do you like stories with strong female characters? Do you like revisiting legends from a totally different point-of-view? Do you have an e-reader and an extra $2.99 laying around the house? If you answered yes to any of those, Poseidon and Cleito is the book for you.

Now how about a little more Chris Hemsworth?

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In closing, buying Poseidon and Cleito for the crazy, early release price of $2.99 may just be the most important thing you do this year. I mean, I’m not saying there aren’t a lot of big things going on in the world, like presidential elections and global warming and economic uncertainty. But why not take a little break from all of that unpleasant stuff and immerse yourself in an amazing adventure story? You’ll be contributing to adult literacy. You’ll impress people with your reading cred when you can drop into conversation: “Yeah, I happen to be reading a really excellent book too.”

I guess what I’m saying is you can’t afford not to buy Poseidon and Cleito at this amazing, early release price. As the great Ted Cruz said at the Republican Convention: “Vote your conscience. E-books matter!” OK, maybe he didn’t say that last part. But do you care?

Poseidon & Cleito Book Cover published by EDGE-Lite 2016

Cover reveal: Poseidon and Cleito!

Before I run off to a group va-cay in Mykonos, Greece, to celebrate my 15th wedding anniversary–thank you very much, I thought I’d share this big news.

The cover art is done for my upcoming title Poseidon and Cleito!!

And here it is:Poseidon & Cleito Book Cover published by EDGE-Lite 2016

I am pretty much in love with it, and hope you will be too. The book is coming out from Edge Science Fiction and Fantasy and will be available for pre-order August 15th, for sale by Amazon exclusive November 20th, and available everywhere December 5th.

I go dark on social media from July 1st through July 10th, with the possible exception of posting a photo or two on Facebook or Twitter. We’ll see. I may be too relaxed to even do that. 🙂

Release Day! Banished Sons of Poseidon!!

via GIPHY

October 14th, 2015: Today is the day! Banished Sons of Poseidon, the follow up to The Seventh Pleiade, hits stores, spreading some high fantasy, Atlantean queerness around the world.

Early reviews have been a bit slow to come in, but I was thrilled that BSoP was picked out by All Our Worlds Diverse Fantasy Fiction.

” ★★★★1/2. Monsters, magic and vibrant characters. A lot of fun.”

You can read the full review here. 

Here’s the cover and the story blurb:

BanishedSonsofPoseidon2

After escaping from a flood that buried the aboveground in seawater, a fractured group of boys contend with the way ahead and their trust of an underground race of men who gives them shelter. For sixteen-year-old Dam, it’s a strange, new second chance. There are wonders in the underworld and a foreign warrior Hanhau who is eager for friendship despite Dam’s dishonorable past.

But a rift between his countrymen threatens to send their settlement into chaos. Peace between the evacuees and Hanhau’s tribe depends on sharing a precious relic that glows with arcane energy. When danger emerges from the shadowed backcountry, Dam must undertake a desperate mission. It’s the only hope for the Atlanteans to make it home to the surface. It’s the only way to save Hanhau and his people.

Buy it now at Amazon, Barnes and Noble or through Indiebound if you prefer.

Atlantis series coming to BBC

Now this is really cool news. BBC is producing a fantasy series based on the legend of Atlantis. Atlantis will be a thirteen x forty-five minute episode mini-series. It’s scheduled for broadcast in the fall.

Here’s the blurb that was released on Telly Surfer:

The city of Atlantis is a mysterious, ancient place: a world of bull leaping, of snake haired goddesses and of palaces so vast it was said they were build by giants. It’s into this strange, compelling realm tha the young Jason arrives and a amazing adventure begins, bringing to life the vast store of Greek myths and legends re-imagined in 45 minute episodes for a new generation.

According to BroadcastNow.co.uk, Atlantis will be picked up by BBC Worldwide for international viewers. I hope that means we’ll be able to see it in the US soon!

This, along with my previous note about T.A. Barron’s upcoming Atlantis book, gives me great hope that 2013 will be a big year for rekindled interest in Atlantis, including my YA novel The Seventh Pleiade.

BBC previously aired an Atlantis movie Atlantis End of a World, Birth of a Legend in 2010. I didn’t catch it, but it’s described as a historical drama based on the theory that a volcanic eruption near Crete (the destruction of the Ancient Minoans) was the source of the story. I posted the movie trailer below.

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