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Medusa

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Medusa

By: Jessie Burton
Narrated by: Alisha Bailey
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Summary

Bloomsbury presents Medusa by Jessie Burton, read by Alisha Bailey.

SHORTLISTED FOR THE YOTO CARNEGIE MEDAL
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'A beautiful and profound retelling' – Madeline Miller, author of The Song of Achilles and Circe
'Gives the serpent-headed monster of myth a powerful and haunting humanity' – Jennifer Saint, author of Ariadne and Elektra
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If I told you that I’d killed a man with a glance, would you wait to hear the rest? The why, the how, what happened next?

Monster. Man-hater. Murderess. Forget everything you’ve been told about Medusa.
Internationally bestselling author Jessie Burton flips the script in this astonishing retelling of Greek myth, illuminating the woman behind the legend at last.

Exiled to a far-flung island after being abused by powerful Gods, Medusa has little company other than the snakes that adorn her head instead of hair. Haunted by the memories of a life before everything was stolen from her, she has no choice but to make peace with her present: Medusa the Monster. But when the charmed and beautiful Perseus arrives on the island, her lonely existence is blown apart, unleashing desire, love... and betrayal.

Perfect for listeners who loved Circe and Ariadne, as Medusa comes alive in a new version of the story that history set in stone long ago.
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'… a must-read for women of all ages' – Red magazine
'Utterly transporting' – Guardian Books of the Year
'… an impressive addition to the shelves of feminist retellings, balancing rage with beautiful storytelling' – Irish Times

©2021 Jessie Burton (P)2021 Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Fantasy Fiction Magic Greek Mythology Mythology Ancient Greece
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All stars
Most relevant
Jessie told Medusa's story and strength beautifully. It was both harrowing and inspiring to hear her traumas and how she learned to heal from them.
I think the narrator did such an amazing job as well, her voice fit so perfectly with Medusa

Phenomenal

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Wrapped in a mythical story are some amazing messages for young ladies. Would have loved to have read this book in my early teens.

A must for all teenage girls

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An evocative tale of identity, love and betrayal. Medusas is one of many stories that certain facts or rumours remain hidden from us and sometimes that’s what is so fascinating about the myth (and other myths), we can imagine and paint their stories in our minds and that is something truly special and worth reading about.

Well done to Jessie Burton for sharing this story of a women who rejected herself to finding her worth and value, even if others couldn’t or chose not to see it.

5 Star ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

The myth that never dies!!!!

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Minor spoiler warning

The true feminist story of medusa

The twist of story having medusa turn Perseus to stone instead of him killing her was a story I didn’t know I knew I needed. The way the author portrays Medusa’s character as well as her sisters makes you sympathise and be on the side of her. You understand her choices, how she chose to keep Perseus’s body on the cliff side as a memorial to her power.

The ending when she enters the water is beautiful, facing Poseidon after what he had done, realising that she is bigger and stronger than him, realising that she is medusa. Her accepting herself and her snakes is a true form of feminist embracement and I could have no asked for a better ending than how the author portrayed this.

Bite size feminist story

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Good recording of an interesting new perspective of an old myth. I enjoyed it. 🙂

interesting story. Well told.

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