Chapter One and Chapter Two are FREE to read if you want to see what it's all about, but Chapter Three and onward are available to patrons ONLY!
For just a dollar a month, you can read along, each chapter (between 4-7 a month) delivered directly to your inbox. For five dollars a month, you'll get mobi/epub files of each month's chapters, too! (And at all levels, access to past patron exclusive content, too!)
Seven months of Pirithous in the modern world begins now! I hope you'll join us (and him) on this newest adventure!!
More details in the Cover Copy:
Pirithous is back!
But after 3000 years trapped in Hades,
what does he have left to live for?
Pirithous, son of Zeus, stumbles out of the Underworld into Upstate New York, a land nothing like the one he left behind so long ago. The price of his freedom: revive the worship of his gods and build Persephone a temple for her help in his escape. But the world is so changed, Pirithous, once a wealthy and honored king, doesn't know where to begin.
Raised in a strict Greek Orthodox family, Thalia has always been something of a wild child. Wild enough to pick up an attractive man off the side of the road in exchange for his help, no questions asked. When he claims he's a son of Zeus, she gives him the benefit of the doubt. But Pirithous is more pirate than anything else, and an interstate road sign isn't the only thing he's happy to steal...
Hunted by centaurs sent by Hades himself, Pirithous is a danger to more than the woman who’s taken him in, and even for love and the help he needs to repay his debts, it's hard to justify the risk. Pirithous must find a way to work around the threat of his gods and the complications of the modern world to become the man and the hero Thalia deserves. Unless he’d prefer to return to the Underworld--and this time, there’s no coming back.
A fan-favorite hero in Helen of Sparta and Tamer of Horses, Pirithous returns for another adventure, this time set in the world you know.
Amazon | Barnes&Noble
Amazon | Barnes&Noble
How exciting, will this come out as a physical copy?
ReplyDeleteI'm working on the formatting for the print edition and digital wide release as I type this, in fact! Look for it this summer.
DeleteThank you for the notification and also just to let you know I am very pleased to find an author like you, who sees Theseus not as some kind of jerk but as a kind hearted man.
ReplyDeleteAhhh! Yes, I LOVE him. I think there is a lot of evidence to support that he is not so monstrous as he has been made to seem. I think we cannot divorce the influence of the gods in the story of Ariadne--upon which a lot of the ideas relating to his jerk-character have laid their foundation.
Delete