Goddess of Love by P C Cast
Any genre mash-up risks making unwitting comedy, but the practiced hand of American writer P C Cast lends an air of plausibility to the most unlikely of proceedings (Greek gods descending from Mount Olympus to find their true loves in the American Midwest?).
Earlier books in Cast’s ‘Goddess Summoning’ series have seen mortals elevated to the realm of the gods, but in this fifth installment, Goddess of Love, the fantasy and paranormal romance scribe turns the tables. Here we find that high-profile goddess – known to the Greeks as Venus and the Romans as Aphrodite – lonely and dissatisfied in her marriage of amicable convenience to Vulcan, the god of fire.
Meanwhile, back on Earth Dorreth Chamberlain, known as Pea, is flailing. A resident of Tulsa, Oklahoma (where the author lives when not in Grand Cayman Island or Scotland), Pea has a plum job as director of the city’s community college’s continuing education department, but harbours unrequited lust for a spunky local firefighter, Griffin, whom she meets when he rescues her Scottish terrier from a tree. (The pup who thinks she’s a cat is something of a standing joke, and comes in handy when Venus needs to convince Pea of her immortal and omnipotent status.)
The goddess and the human meet following a chance trip to Borders where, seeking inspiration, Pea happens upon a book titled Discover the Goddess Within – Unleash Venus and Open Your Life to Love, by a writer with the portentous name of Juno Panhellenius. Pea opens the pages, utters a goddess-summoning invocation, and Venus is shortly thereafter at her elbow, vowing as bidden to bring happiness and ecstasy into her life.
Handily, Venus knows what to expect from her earthly descent and is able to settle in fast, having earlier been clued in to the characteristics of modern cities by Persephone, who has been taking diverting mini-breaks in Tulsa via a portal kept open by her mother Demeter (precisely why is not clear).
As Pea and Venus set to the ecstasy task, Vulcan, observing from Mount Olympus, develops a crush on the hapless mortal. Then Venus meets Griffin, and sparks fly. Cue what is surely one of the most raunchy, comical and inventively absurd parties ever to feature in the young-adult-skewed-fantasy-paranormal-romance-set-in-Oklahoma canon, when Venus has an impassioned encounter with Griffin and Pea becomes the delighted object of Vulcan’s ardent attentions.
Things get briefly sticky when Pea learns of Venus’ betrayal and all characters are confronted with the apparently insurmountable hurdle of the fact of human mortality, but Cast does a fine job of maintaining a largely light tone, thanks in part to her wry observations about the eccentricities of 21st century life (Venus, fond of dispensing and consuming ambrosia, is puzzled when Pea talks of ‘taking a Xanax’, but reassured when it is described to her as ‘ambrosia in a pill’).
Fans of the Goddess Summoning series will no doubt find it pleasing, and newcomers are likely to be both surprised and amused by the explicit extent of the toga-ripping. Entertained new readers should note that this volume was published in the US in 2007 and the series has since seen three further additions.
2 / 5 stars: Strictly for young adults.
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