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Labyrinth

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Kikeru, the child of a priestess at the sacred temple of Knossos in ancient Crete, believes that the goddesses are laughing at him. They expect him to choose whether he is a man or a woman, when he's both. They expect him to choose whether to be a husband to a wife, or a celibate priestess in the temple, when all he wants to do is invent things and be with the person he loves.

Unfortunately, that person is Rusa, the handsome ship owner who is most decidedly a man and therefore off-limits no matter what he chooses. And did he mention that the goddesses also expect him to avert war with the Greeks?

The Greeks have an army. Kikeru has his mother, Maja, who is pressuring him to give her grandchildren; Jadikira, Rusa's pregnant daughter; and superstitious Rusa, who is terrified of what the goddesses will think of him being in love with one of their chosen ones.

It's a tall order to save Crete from conquest, win his love, and keep both halves of himself. Luckily, at least the daemons are on his side.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 31, 2016
      Though the impetus for the novella clearly comes from an admirable desire to provide a happy romantic ending for a nonbinary character, Beecroft's (Blue Steel Chain) Minoan fantasy suffers from the unrealistic political centering of what ought to be minor players, an unsophisticated and overly romanticized depiction of Minoan culture, and inexplicable demonization of ancient Greece as a gender-essentialist, misogynist, bullying cultural monolith. Rich shipowner Rusa saves and then falls in love with young inventor Kikeru, who has been contemplating the equally unsatisfactory life paths of living as a man and marrying a woman or becoming a temple priestess like his mother. When Kikeru hears Achean men talking about taking over the Minoan complex, Rusa and Kikeru, together with Kikeru's mother and Rusa's pregnant daughter, are tasked by the Queen to prevent war with the Greeks. Kikeru also gets divine support for being both man and woman. Minoan imagery is abundant but often awkward, making the story feel Minoan-themed rather than grounded in history or world-building. Modern concepts (single motherhood by choice, gender-confirming surgery) also mar any historical feel.

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  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook
  • Open EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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