The Goddess Chronicle
"A spectacle that includes multiple layers of opposing forces: life and death, love and hate . . . The author uniquely depicts an unruly mythological world." Shincho MagazineIn a place like no other, on a mystical island in the shape of tear drop, two sisters are born into a family of oracles....
show more
"A spectacle that includes multiple layers of opposing forces: life and death, love and hate . . . The author uniquely depicts an unruly mythological world." Shincho MagazineIn a place like no other, on a mystical island in the shape of tear drop, two sisters are born into a family of oracles. Beautiful Kamikuu is admired far and wide; Namima, small but headstrong, learns to live in her older sister’s shadow. On her sixth birthday, Kamikuu is chosen as the next Oracle, while Namima is forced to become the goddess of darkness, destined to spend eternity guiding the spirits of the deceased to the underworld. As the sisters serve opposite fates, so begins a journey that will take Namima from her first experience of love to scalding betrayal. Caught in an elaborate web of deceit, she travels from the land of the living to the Realm of the Dead and back again seeking vengeance and ultimate closure.Natsuo Kirino turns her hand to an exquisitely dark tale, masterfully reinventing the Japanese creation myth of Izanami and Izanaki. A fantastical tour-de-force, The Goddess Chronicle is a tale as old as the earth about sibling rivalry, ferocious love, and bittersweet revenge.
show less
Format: hardcover
ISBN:
9780802121097 (0802121098)
Publish date: July 23rd 2013
Publisher: Canongate U.S.
Pages no: 320
Edition language: English
Category:
Fantasy,
Science Fiction Fantasy,
Literature,
Cultural,
Historical Fiction,
Literary Fiction,
Asian Literature,
Asia,
Japan,
Japanese Literature,
Mythology,
Retellings
Series: Canongate Myths (#13)
This book was amazing. I don't know much about Japanese culture, or mythology, but this book was lots of fun to read anyway. The story was very well told, even though some parts were a little confusing (everyone switching places, and changing their minds about their intentions at the last minute),...
The story started on the right foot. The story is based on the Japanese mythology of the two gods Izanagi and Izanami. (If you are unfamiliar with the mythos of Japan, Google is your friend). The characters and the world building seemed to jump right off the page. The Goddess Chronicle had a great s...
I am a fan of the Canongate Myths series and I am a fan of Natsuo Kirino who has this way of slipping into the heads of her characters so exactly and so seamlessly that it’s almost a surprise when you, the reader, resurface in the “real” world and realize that the people you have been reading about ...