Review: Goddess Interrupted by Aimée Carter

14 January, 2012 Reviews 5 comments

Review: Goddess Interrupted by Aimée CarterGoddess Interrupted by Amiée Carter
Series: Goddess Test #2
Published by HarlequinTeen on March 27th 2012
Pages: 304
Genres: Paranormal Romance, Young Adult
Format: Paperback
Source: NetGalley
Amazon Good BooksBook Depository
Goodreads
one-star

Kate Winters has won immortality.
But if she wants a life with Henry in the Underworld, she'll have to fight for it.
Becoming immortal wasn't supposed to be the easy part. Though Kate is about to be crowned Queen of the Underworld, she's as isolated as ever. And despite her growing love for Henry, ruler of the Underworld, he's becoming ever more distant and secretive. Then, in the midst of Kate's coronation, Henry is abducted by the only being powerful enough to kill him: the King of the Titans.

As the other gods prepare for a war that could end them all, it is up to Kate to save Henry from the depths of Tartarus. But in order to navigate the endless caverns of the Underworld, Kate must enlist the help of the one person who is the greatest threat to her future.

Henry's first wife, Persephone.

I requested Goddess Interrupted as I’d seen potential, amidst the frustration, in The Goddess Test.  I thought that, given time, hard work and thoughtful application to her prose, Carter might be a good author one day.

Unfortunately, that didn’t quite happen here and part of me understands why.

A lot of the reviews for The Goddess Test focus on:

GAH!  The mythology!  WHAT HAVE YOU DONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

and

A VIRGIN!?  A VIRGIN!?  ARE YOU FUCKING KIDDING ME!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!??!?!

A VIRGIN.  I mean, I’m not getting over that any time soon!

So I appreciate Carter’s efforts to address some of that a little in the novel.  Well, no not really, but I’m trying really hard to be nice here.

But the underlying themes of fidelity and sexual repression were always highly problematic and they’ve only devolved in this novel.

We see this through the characters of Ava and Persephone who are judged and censured very heavily by the main character, Kate.  Ava stays pretty firmly in the camp of irredeemable slut.  As for Persephone: one moment she’s the Whore of Babylon and the next she’s just a selfish, confused woman.  Note:  Neither of these are accurate or even good characterization!

Kate says over and over that, no matter what, she would NEVER have cheated on Henry.  That’s nice, Kate.  You’re all of, what?  18?  Easy to make absolutes when you’re 18 and it’s your first time in love.  So very, very easy.

Persephone was a confused, naive girl when she was married off (didn’t chose) to the Lord of the Underworld.  She never loved him, she hated her job and she withered up without the sun and freedom.  She stayed that way for THOUSANDS of years before finally falling in love with a man and deciding that she’d had enough of a loveless, passionless marriage.  Yet everyone, even the other gods who saw her and how miserable she was, judges her as a shameless hussy.

How long does Kate last in her passionless, loveless marriage?  *Pulls out fingers and toes to start counting* well, let’s see.  They married just before her six month vacation where she didn’t see or hear from Henry.  And when she gets back shit breaks out and so when she finally decides to leave him it would have been… a day.  Yes.  it takes her a day of actually being with Henry before she hangs up the crown and decides to ditch him.

The double standards, which exist all through this book, are aggravating.

In the the first book Ava is punished by Kate.  You see, Ava had been in a relationship with one man.  Then she’d ditched him and started seeing another guy.  Guy #1 bursts in on guy #2 and they fight.  One of them almost dies.  Whose at fault?  Ava.  Obviously.  Men can’t be expected to control themselves when it comes to sex and it was CLEARLY Ava’s fault for… whatever.

So we see Calliope turn evil and she does it because her husband, Zeus, has cheated on her throughout antiquity.  It was really satisfying to see everyone angry and annoyed with Walter.  To see him take personal responsibility for his actions and how they’ve affected Calliope and to see him take part in her punishment… no, wait.  Sorry, none of that happens.  Actually, Calliope is handed over to him so that he can punish her and and try to force her compliance.  She disgusts him.  Charming.

The fail, unfortunately, doesn’t stop there.

We have frustrating characters, too little plot for too many novels, bad pacing, vague action scenes and feminist issues with how the main character is treated.

I could spend all day complaining about how often we had to have Kate reassured that Henry loved her, or how frustratingly annoying Henry is or how unnecessary James is as a character.  About how Henry WASN’T a virgin because he’d had sex.  Once with Persephone.  And it was terrible.  You know, I think that’s actually worse than if he were a virgin…

But most of all, I’m STILL just really disappointed.  Because this is still watered-down mythology and a poor excuse of a Hades/Persephone retelling.  It’s still a copout in so many ways and it’s still thoughtless in its narrative and treatment of characters.

I won’t read the next one.  I think Carter’s progress as a writer is limited in the world she’s already built.  But I do think I’ve seen evidence in the text that leads me to believe that she’s better than this.  I guess I’ll have to wait until she leaves this series behind to find out if that’s true.

Kat Kennedy

Kat Kennedy

Co-blogger at Cuddlebuggery
Kat Kennedy is a book reviewer and aspiring author in the Young Adult genre. She reviews critically but humorously and get super excited about great books. Find her on GoodReads.
Kat Kennedy

5 Responses to “Review: Goddess Interrupted by Aimée Carter”

  1. Amelia

    I like this review, Kat. In fact, it inspired me to completely scrap my Goodreads review of GODDESS TEST and go for the honest opinion.And as always – cool graphics (:

  2. Ezmirelda

    Your review is hilarious Cuddlebug! I remember when the author was telling people in an interview that Henry was a virgin and I was like….Wait….hold up a sec. O_o God of the underworld, steals young girls, lived for thousand of thousands of years. Yeah…still not believing it. :p

  3. Ezmirelda

    I think it's the Q & A she posted on her blog about a month or so ago. She made a post about questions asked about Goddess Interrupted and I think that was one of the questions asked. P.S – So I clicked on the audio thingy at the bottom of one of your reviews and just had to say–your accent is so cool!

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