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Books with title Medusa

  • Medusa

    S. D. Hines

    language (Story Merchant Books, Aug. 6, 2013)
    In one of the most compelling tales from classical Greece since Mary Renault's Bull from the Sea and Fire from Heaven, author Scot Hines retells the legend of Medusa in a way that makes her feel like a contemporary millennial girl with very special problems. Despite a semi-miraculous birth in the temple of Athena, Medusa is nothing more than a devoted priestess of the goddess, distinguished only by her beauty and piety. But after she is raped by the god Poseidon, her entire world is ripped asunder and she flees Poseidon's wrath through ancient Greece and beyond for the inconceivable crime of resistance.In her wanderings, she encounters dangers and horrors, but also friends in unexpected places. Pursued by Poseidon's fury and his assassins, she is finally cornered in Egypt with only two choices: fight back or be destroyed with all she loves. But her only hope lies with the father of her children, the great love of her life and the man who is prophesized to kill her: Perseus.As one in Hines' Heroines of Classical Greece series, MEDUSA will leave you longing for more--and you'll want to move immediately to ARIADNE A TALE OF THE MINOTAUR. It’s intelligent YA with an emphasis on “A.” You'll want to recommend it to your friends--and especially to your daughters.A committed bibliophile and neurologist Hines lives in Alaska and helps provide health care to some of the most incredible people in the world, the Alaska Natives. When not working, he is planning some wild adventure to the arctic, Patagonia, or the Himalayas. But more than anything, he loves blending tales of history, mythology, and science, and sees nothing incompatible in the mixture.
  • Medusa

    Thomas Thiemeyer

    eBook (Thomas Thiemeyer, July 9, 2019)
    Beyond imagination. A menacing stone sculpture in the middle of the Sahara. A research group lost in a labyrinth of caves. And a woman who is the only one who can interpret the cryptic signs …Amid ancient rock paintings deep in the heart of the Sahara, Hannah Peters, an experienced archaeologist, makes a startling discovery. A Medusa sculpture decorated with maps and symbols; a harbinger of a lost cult of fabulous beauty and sinister power. When a team from the National Geographic Society joins Hannah on her treasure hunt, she is overcome by a deep sense of foreboding. And the nightmare begins. Human senses are incapable of comprehending what the stone eye of the Medusa is capable of. It is not meant for the living …
  • Medusa

    Jodyanne Benson

    Library Binding (Cavendish Square, Dec. 15, 2019)
    Few women from ancient mythology have made their way into the cultural landscape as much as Medusa has. She is seemingly everywhere, from high art to popular culture. This book explores Medusa's origin story and her place in mythology. It likewise studies the role women had in ancient society and considers how the myth of Medusa affected that role by serving as an example or a tale of caution. Through facts and sidebars, images, and easy-to-read language, young readers will also learn about the ancient world in which Medusa's myth evolved, and discover how she appears as a celebratory and powerful figure in popular culture today.
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  • Medusa

    Jodyanne Benson

    Paperback (Cavendish Square, Dec. 15, 2019)
    Few women from ancient mythology have made their way into the cultural landscape as much as Medusa has. She is seemingly everywhere, from high art to popular culture. This book explores Medusa's origin story and her place in mythology. It likewise studies the role women had in ancient society and considers how the myth of Medusa affected that role by serving as an example or a tale of caution. Through facts and sidebars, images, and easy-to-read language, young readers will also learn about the ancient world in which Medusa's myth evolved, and discover how she appears as a celebratory and powerful figure in popular culture today.
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  • Medusa

    Bernard Evslin

    Library Binding (Chelsea House Pub, Feb. 1, 1987)
    Recounts the story of the serpent-haired creature whose gaze turned people to stone, and the adventures of the hero who eventually vanquished her.
  • Medusa

    Deborah Nourse Lattimore

    Hardcover (Harpercollins Childrens Books, April 16, 2000)
    When her vanity angered the goddess Athena, a curse befell the beautiful Medusa that caused men to turn into stone at the mere sight of her, thus when Perseus, a mortal, is ordered to claim her head in order to complete his task, he knows that he must have the perfect plan or he, too, shall die at the sight of her.
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  • Medusa

    Rob M. Worley, Mike Dubisch

    Library Binding (Short Tales, Jan. 1, 2008)
    Beauty isn't everything, as Medusa learns. Find out how the goddess Athena teaches this lesson in this brilliantly illustrated Greek myth. Pink level for your fluent reader.
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  • Medusa

    Tony Talbot

    language (, Feb. 18, 2014)
    Lissa Two is a thief of the ocean cities, struggling to make enough money to clear her debts and take care of her traumatised sister, scratching a meagre living as best she can.So she has enough worries without her life getting more complicated…but when a boy named Hattan literally falls from the sky, she can't just let him drown.It's a decision she comes to regret, a decision that will change not only her life, but the lives of everyone she loves.If they survive…
  • Medusa

    Xavier W. Niz

    Library Binding (Capstone Press, Sept. 1, 2004)
    Provides the story of Medusa, Perseus' quests to kill her, and describes the role of myths in the modern world.
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  • Medusa

    Frances Nagle

    Paperback (Gareth Stevens Pub, Aug. 15, 2016)
    The story of Perseus beheading Medusa has been told for more than 2,000 years. Even today, images of Medusa can be found in popular culture. Through accessible language and content, readers learn the story of Medusa and the Gorgons in monstrous detail, including how Medusa may have gotten her hair turned to snakes. Full-color photographs show modern and historic depictions of this famous myth while fun fact boxes give readers context for one of the greatest monster stories in Greek mythology.
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  • Medusa

    Don Nardo

    Hardcover (KidHaven, Sept. 20, 2004)
    Introduces Medusa and her snake-haired sisters, who were the Gorgons of Greek mythology; tells how Perseus killed her; and looks at how she has been depicted in art and popular culture, including films and video games.
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  • Medusa

    Kathleen Tracy

    Library Binding (Mitchell Lane Publishers, May 11, 2010)
    One of Greek mythology s most notorious monsters, Medusa, was so horrible that looking at her turned people to stone. But she wasn t always hideous. Medusa was born the beautiful daughter of two gods. A victim of Poseidon s whim, she incurred the wrath of the goddess Athena, who punished her by turning her into a monster. Then Athena doomed her to die at the hands of the hero Perseus. Even though Medusa is a minor character in the Greek stories, she has captured people s imagination for thousands of years. On the surface her story is a cautionary tale about dangers of vanity and pride. Looking closer, the story reveals intriguing glimpses into ancient Greek culture and the role of women played in society.
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