July Wrap up and August Hopefuls 2021

Happy August ✨ It was a slow month of reading for me, with one paper back and one audio book finished. However, I enjoyed them both so I still count it as a good reading month!


I gave both books a ★★★★☆.5

I gave both books a ★★★★☆.5

July Wrap Up

The first book I read this month was A Game of Fate by Scarlett St. Clair which I read via audiobook. It took me a while to get used to the narrator for this one, and I wouldn’t say he’s my favourite narrator but I got used to him. A Game of Fate is essentially the same story as A Touch of Darkness but from Hades point of view. If you’re worried that you’re going to find it too similar to Persephone’s point of view, don’t! Listening to this book, although you obviously recognise the course of the events and the interactions between the two gods, but you get so much more insight into the world of the gods through Hades point of view. Hades gets up to a lot in his spare time away from Persephone, he interacts with a number of different mortals and gods, and it really opens up the politics and the wider world of the novels. It also gives the reader an invaluable opportunity to know what Hades is thinking in every interaction he has with Persephone, and how she affects him which I absolutely adored. So, if you loved A Touch of Darkness, definitely read this one!

The second and final book I finished this month was Venus & Aphrodite: History of a Goddess by Bettany Hughes. This surprising light and easy to read non-fiction takes you from the beginning of the goddess Aphrodite with her early influences in Mesopotamia, to the modern-day reception of the goddess. The book reads as if Bettany is just chatting to you, which made it easy to read and accessible for anyone wanting to learn about the goddess. The connections to the early war goddesses of Mesopotamia (Inanna, Ishtar and Astarte) were fascinating, and Bettany supported her claims with archaeological evidence and images in the book. I absolutely loved reading the changes in the goddess both through time and region, and how the depictions of her, and the connotations towards her morphed. I definitely feel like the goddess Aphrodite/Venus has been simplified into the goddess of sex and desire with little substance, and this book is out here to remind the world that she is so much more.

August Hopefuls

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This month I continued to read The Real Valkyrie: The Hidden History of Viking Warrior Women by Nancy Marie Brown. I’ve been really enjoying the intertwining of fact and fiction, and hopefully, I’ll get it finished this month! I am also half way through Red Rising by Pierce Brown which I started on a whim for a buddy read and I am ABSOLUTELY loving it! I’ve also just found out that it isn’t a trilogy anymore, and that is very exciting! I also started Assassins Apprentice by Robin Hobb which I have been really enjoying, but I’ve been neglecting it since I started Red Rising so hopefully I can pick it back up again this month. But of course, I am a true mood reader at heart, and it is truly impossible to plan my reading. I definitely need to finish The Real Valkyrie and I will HAVE to finish Red Rising because it’s so addicting. The final book on my radar for August it Egyptian Mythology by Garry Shaw, which I am so stocked to have an early release copy of because I’m going to have the opportunity to interview Garry about it and I’m SO EXCITED! But, other than that, we’ll just have to see what I feel like picking up. Maybe I’ll join another spontaneous buddy read, who knows. What are you most looking forward to reading this month? Lemme know down in the comments or find me over on Instagram @kell_read!

Review: Venus & Aphrodite: History of a Goddess by Bettany Hughes

★★★★☆.5 I am only now getting into reading non-fiction books for fun, and not for uni or work so I’m still working on how I feel about rating them. With that being said, overall I really enjoyed reading this book.


What's the book about?

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Venus & Aphrodite: History of a Goddess by Bettany Hughes is a light, easy read which follows the history of the goddess best known as Venus or Aphrodite, from her beginnings to the modern reception of the goddess. Using archaeological evidence with textual sources and more recent artworks and literature, Bettany traces the origins of the goddess of love, and both her movements and developments through history.

As some will know, Aphrodite is the Ancient Greek goddess of love, desire, beauty and sexuality, and Venus is the Roman counterpart to Aphrodite, and held dominion over fertility, prostitution and victory. However, as Bettany delves into in the first few chapters of her book, Aphrodite didn’t just appear in the artwork and literature of Ancient Greece suddenly, but evolved from both the Cypriot spirit of procreation and fertility, as well as the Near Eastern goddesses of war Inanna, Astarte and Ishtar. Beginning from both the mythological beginnings of Aphrodite (with the castration of Ouranos, and the goddess emerging from the sea foam caused by the god’s genitals falling into the ocean), as well as the archaeological beginnings, and moving all the way through the renaissance depictions and the morphing of her dominions and depictions through to the modern-day, Bettany has provided an accessible and easy to read guide to the goddess and her history.

“A potent idea, given a name and a face across five millennia, this deity is the incarnation of fear as well as love, of pain as well as pleasure, of the agony and ecstasy of desire”

thoughts and feelings

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From the very first page, I knew this was going to be a far easier read than I was initially anticipating. Bettany has written this book as if she was just chatting to a mate, and honestly, I loved that. Although it initially caught me off guard, it made it so much more appealing, and tempted me to pick it up more often knowing that the language used was easygoing. The colloquial language, however, doesn’t take away from the importance of this goddess, and her significance throughout history, especially in ancient civilisations. What Bettany has done, is a thorough investigation on the goddess, and then turned that hard evidence into a book that is easily understood and accessible to anyone. Bettany has achieved the goal of bringing archaeological and historical facts into the world in an easy to read and enjoyable book, and I love it! Her addition of images throughout the book, both in black and white dispersed through the book, and in the middle which is full of coloured images, makes it all the more interesting, especially in the discussions around the changes in the physical depictions of the goddess.

“It [desire] is the life force that spurs us on to do, to be, to think.”

I love that it was a short, easy read. It means that there’s a far better chance that more people will pick it up (and I love the idea that the ancient world is becoming something more open and available). But, some points Bettany made, I felt like I wanted more evidence that backed up her conclusion. I am sure that she has done her research, and I don’t doubt any of the statements or conclusions she has come to in this fascinating history, but I would have loved just a bit more depth into some of the evidence (whether it be archaeological or textual), that she has used to form her conclusions. In saying that, I always want more out of my books, and I commend her for making this book so full of information, and yet so easy to read.

I definitely feel like the goddess Aphrodite/Venus has been simplified into the goddess of sex and desire with little substance, and this book is out here to remind the world that she is so much more. Bettany explores the goddesses roots in the war-goddesses of the Near East (Inanna, Ishtar and Astarte), and brings to the forefront the seemingly contradictory beginnings of this goddess through love, desire and war. This book details just how much the attitudes towards the goddess has developed throughout the millennia, and what her body and her symbols have meant throughout the years. The complexities of Aphrodite/Venus have been written and painted out of history in the last thousand years, and this book is bringing back the intricacy of this goddess, which will hopefully culminate in the respect and adoration she deserves.

Have you read Venus & Aphrodite: History of a Goddess by Bettany Hughes? What did you think of it? I would love to chat about this book, either in the comments below, or find me over on Instagram @kell_read.