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A modern girl's comedic odyssey in a school filled with the descendants of Greek gods.
When Phoebe's mom returns from Greece with a new husband and moves them to an island in the Aegean, Phoebe's plans for her senior year and track season are ancient history. Now she must attend the uberexclusive academy, where admission depends on pedigree, namely, ancestry from Zeus, Hera, and other Greek gods. That's right, they're real, not myth, and their teen descendants are like the classical heroessupersmart and superbeautiful with a few superpowers. And now they're on her track team! Armed only with her Nikes and the will to win, Phoebe races to find her place among the gods.
Phoebe Castro's plans for her senior year undergo a radical makeover when her widowed mother returns early from a Greek vacation, engaged to a man she's just met and determined to whisk Phoebe off to the tiny Aegean island of Serfopoula, where her future stepfather runs the academy that Phoebe will attend. The twist: it's Plato's Academy, now filled with the descendants of the Greek gods and goddesses. Debut author Childs's creativity in manipulating mythology gives an otherwise familiar plot a fun, fresh update. The academy's cliques, for example, include the Zeus/Hera set (into "power, privilege, and partying"), the Poseidon crowd (surfers) and nerds, who descend from Hephaestus ("I think he's embarrassed by them," one student confides). Add the romantic island setting, snappy dialogue, boys as handsome as Adonis, a few conniving (but ultimately harmless) villains and a protagonist who is a hard-core athlete as much as a girl who squeals about the possibility of a date, and together they make an effervescent, fast-paced read. Ages 12-up. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. More Reviews and RecommendationsTera Lynn Childs has been an actor, architecture historian, and seventh-grade teacher. This is her first novel. She lives in Houston, Texas.
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January 20, 2010: This book is a must read! Phoebe can brighten anyone's mood! Her very presence in O.MY.GODS. is enough to give the reader a good laugh.
I especially like how Childs took, molded, and produced the next book in Rick Riordan's hit series. It is more from Annabeth's point of view, though. Ha-ha!I cannot wait for the next book in the series! O.MY.GODS is so edgy and fast. Just the fact that Stella placed the bet on Phoebe was enough to keep me reading! :)Reader Rating:
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January 10, 2010: Phoebe Castro is on the fast-track to achieving her dream of attending USC with her friends on a cross-country scholarship, but this all changes when her mom announces that she's marrying a near-stranger and moving them to Greece in this Young Adult Romance by Tera Lynn Childs.
Before she knows it, Phoebe is stuck on a secret island in the Aegean and attending a super-exclusive private school known as the Academy, where her new stepfather is the headmaster and the kids are anything but average-they're descendants of the Greek gods, superpowers included. Her only chance of reclaiming her old life lies in securing that scholarship, but managing that could be an ungodly challenge, considering she's got a sabotaging stepsister, and a gorgeous guy-a veritable god!-in her way. The story is a fun, easy read, ideally suited to the audience, especially the younger end of the Young Adult crowd. Phoebe is moody and belligerent when her mom moves them halfway across the world, which rings true, and despite this, she's a likeable character that develops nicely as the story progresses. The plot was entertaining and moved quickly, albeit predictably, and the setting and premise were fun and interesting. Unfortunately, all the other characters are a bit over the top. Her friend Nola (short for Granola) is a hippie child, environmentally concerned, conspiracy theorist. Her stepsister, Stella, is as nasty as any that Cinderella could have claimed. Her mom is a clichéd therapist ("That sounds like you're running away from your problems.")The biggest problem I had with the story was that the main characters weren't as fully developed (probably the reason for the clichéd, over the top characters that were there) as they could be, and, as a result, the romance part of the story didn't develop well. Griffin, the undeniably gorgeous love interest, goes from nice, to jerk, to loving, with very little explanation. As a romance reader, I want there to be more redeeming qualities in the male half of the relationship than great looks and a compulsion (yes, an actual compulsion) to help people in danger. On the whole, it was a fun read and I like the main character enough that I am looking forward to the next book in the series, Goddess Boot Camp.I Also Recommend: Never Cry Werewolf, My Soul to Take, ABC's of Kissing Boys.