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Loading... Lore (original 2021; edition 2021)by Alexandra Bracken (Author)
Work InformationLore by Alexandra Bracken (2021)
![]() READ in 2023 (7) No current Talk conversations about this book. I did love this book in that when I wasn't reading, I was thinking about it constantly and truly wanting to know what was going to happen next. However, I am a character-motivated reader, not plot-motivated, and even after 450 pages I was not interested in any of the induvidual characters. Save, perhaps, Athena, but we don't truly get to KNOW her in the way I would have liked. I wanted to love Lore herself, but her unwillingness to be open and vulnerable with anyone, even the reader, made it nearly impossible to connect with her. Even by the end of the book I felt like she was keeping us at arms length despite the direness of her journey. "Monsters lived in the shadows. To hunt them, you couldn’t be afraid to follow. And the only way to destroy them was to have the sharper teeth and the darker heart." Lore is one of those few books where you don’t see the twists coming and a plot that is genuinely different! It’s also an incredibly violent book where these families have clung to some really insane outdated traditions to maintain power. The angle with Tidebringer was really interesting, but it was also weird to see how the families treated women. I did have a problem with how I wasn’t really invested in any of the characters because besides Castor and Lore you don’t really explore any of the other relationships Lore has, we’re just told that these are deep and meaningful but not shown. I did see the romance and I wish the author had done something different with that. However, the authors writing sucks you in and you kinda just start reading! Yes, there are quite a few names at the start, but I don’t feel like it’s too much information. The twist that we get at the end is one that you really aren’t prepared for because all the signs that could have been pointing towards this could have been that character just being who they are (and they are a bit of an ass). Greek mythology, false gods and true gods. I really wanted to like this book more than I did but I’ll be honest I became more confused as I read. And the ending wasn’t what I expected, it didn’t really go out with a bang. If your students like fantasy mixed with dystopia with a heavy dose of mythology and God’s, this is a book for them. I can’t even figure out if there’s gonna be a sequel And if there is there are some questions that I feel need to be answered. “Power does not transform you, he’d said. It only reveals you.” Melora Perseous believes she's successfully fled the brutal world of the gods and the Agon, a punishment for a past rebellion that forces nine Greek gods to walk the earth as mortals, hunted by descendants of the ancient bloodlines eager to kill a god and seize the divine power that comes with such a kill. When the Agon returns this time to New York City, where Lore has been trying to create a home for herself and move on from the brutal murder of her family by a rival bloodline, she finds herself pulled back in by two unlikely participants: a god, and a figure from her past who should, by all accounts, be dead. Lore navigates survival, malice, loyalty, and sacrifice as she is pulled through the dread cycle of the Agon, in this Odyssean epic-turned-modern. “When we can't change the past, the only thing left is to move forward.” Bracken's newest work is a beautiful collaboration between modern YA Fiction and the classic features of a Greek epic, and it pays homage to its roots as such while giving the reader the new perspective on classic mythology and lore that most who pick up this title are craving. From its roots in narrative tragedy to its deus-ex-machina ending, this novel is not simply classics-inspired; it is entwined with its history. The tale is as Homeric as even Homer himself, who may never have existed at all, could only hope to achieve. The modern setting builds an interesting dynamic bridge between the current world and the ethics of the past, and although this work is a thrilling read, it is also an interesting consideration on the nature of humanity over the span of eons and ages. “Scars are tallies of the battles you’ve survived.” One of the aspects of this story that I found most interesting in terms of homage to its roots is the depiction of the morals of the gods and the members of the ancient bloodlines both. Kleos is mentioned often as both a motivation for actions throughout the narrative, and as a consideration for the entire premise as a whole. There is a uniquely human sense of pride, honor, and duty that passes through these pages and is not limited to the humans in this tale, but affects the gods as well -- which is a refreshing look at divinity from a cultural aspect that is not surrounded by Westernized Christianity, even if the gods in this tale are a little more murderous than I think most of us would hope our divine figure of choice would be. “Fear is a foreign land I shall never visit and a language that will never cross my tongue.” As much as this is a story about divinity, honor, and allegiance to one's bloodline, it is also about the subversion of these concepts even as they have influenced us today. Strength is not the measure of your ability to remain on your feet, but a measure of your ability to return to your feet time and time again. In the end, loyalty and love are not punished as with many of the classic myths, but are rewarded. The gods are as much human as god, the humans are much god as mortal. There is evil everywhere, but there can be goodness everywhere as well. Lore is truly everything you could want from a modern myth-inspired fiction and more, and Bracken ties it together with her vivid prose and sweeping narrative, with the cohesive build of each character until they might as well be standing next to you as you read. In a sentence: my favorite way to read. “It’s not always the truth that survives, but the stories we wish to believe.” Overall, I highly recommend this book to anyone who loves myth-inspired works or who genuinely wants a great story with great worldbuilding. no reviews | add a review
For centuries, Zeus has punished the gods with a game called the Agon, which turns them mortal for one week, and at the mercy of being hunted by those with godly ambitions. Only a handful of the original Greek gods remain, the rest replaced by the mortals who killed them and ascended. After her family's sadistic murder by a rival bloodline, Lore escapes and vows to repay her parents' sacrifice by doing one thing - surviving. For seven years, she has pushed back dark thoughts of revenge against the man responsible for their murder, a man by the name of Wrath who has attained unimaginable power. Except for one week, every seven years. A week that is fast approaching. When Lore comes home on the first night of the Agon to find Athena gravely wounded on her doorstep, the goddess offers her an alliance; they have a mutual enemy, after all. But as the world trembles under the force of Wrath - a god with the power to destroy all of humanity - will Lore's decision to bind her fate with Athena's come back to haunt her? No library descriptions found. |
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6 — Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyLC ClassificationRatingAverage:![]()
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A good story but too full of fight scenes for me to fully immerse myself in it. Found myself skim reading a lot towards the end. Sure there were some twists but eh, it wasn't something I'd ever read again. (