Medusa: New & Ancient Greek Tales
By Liv Albert (Introduction), Miriam Robbins Dexter (Foreword by), Alicia K. Anderson (Contribution by), Mel Attica (Contribution by), Casey Banks (Contribution by), Danai Christopoulou (Contribution by), Grace P. Fong (Contribution by), Rhys Hughes (Contribution by), Tom Johnstone (Contribution by), Amanda Cecelia Lang (Contribution by), Megan Mahoney (Contribution by), Tracie McBride (Contribution by), Zenobia Neil (Contribution by), Gabriella Ramalho (Contribution by), Oneness Sankara (Contribution by), Zach Shephard (Contribution by), Liv Strom (Contribution by), Theresa Tyree (Contribution by), Leah Warren (Contribution by)
Hardcover
$30.00
By Liv Albert (Introduction), Miriam Robbins Dexter (Foreword by), Alicia K. Anderson (Contribution by), Mel Attica (Contribution by), Casey Banks (Contribution by), Danai Christopoulou (Contribution by), Grace P. Fong (Contribution by), Rhys Hughes (Contribution by), Tom Johnstone (Contribution by), Amanda Cecelia Lang (Contribution by), Megan Mahoney (Contribution by), Tracie McBride (Contribution by), Zenobia Neil (Contribution by), Gabriella Ramalho (Contribution by), Oneness Sankara (Contribution by), Zach Shephard (Contribution by), Liv Strom (Contribution by), Theresa Tyree (Contribution by), Leah Warren (Contribution by)
Premium Members save an extra 10% and all Members collect stamps to save with Rewards. 10 stamps = $5.Learn More
Select a store to view item availability.
Building on the huge popularity of mythological retellings, here is the story of the much misunderstood Medusa, told through ancient and modern minds, in a beautiful collectable edition.
Variously described as a fiend, a monster, a charming seductress who was felled by the righteous might of Perseus, son of Zeus, Medusa is perhaps the most misunderstood of mythological women. Described by male historians, poets and epic writers such as Hesiod and Ovid, there are many aspects of her imagined ...
Variously described as a fiend, a monster, a charming seductress who was felled by the righteous might of Perseus, son of Zeus, Medusa is perhaps the most misunderstood of mythological women. Described by male historians, poets and epic writers such as Hesiod and Ovid, there are many aspects of her imagined ...




