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Corydon and the Island of Monsters [Paperback]

Tobias Druitt (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: SIMON & SCHUSTER CHI; New Ed edition (January 3, 2006)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 068987538X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0689875380
  • Product Dimensions: 5.2 x 7.8 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,328,920 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful Twist to a Familiar Mythological Story!, August 19, 2008
By 
Amy Graham (Scottsdale, AZ) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Corydon, the lead character begins this tale as a humble goat herder run out of his native village (the mob included his own mother) as a Pharmakos due to a deformity (one leg is "goat footed"). Corydon finds peace as a simple goat herder on a largely deserted part of the island, that is until a group of pirates show up and captures him, adding him into their traveling "freak" show. Here Corydon finds himself imprisoned with the likes of the Sphinx, Medusa, The Minotaur and many others. During his brief imprisonment, Corydon finds an unlikely friendship with the gorgon, Medusa and he finds there is a surprising humanity to her and all the monsters...each is tender and much more human than the humans in this story in their own monstrous way. Lucking into being nearest the fearful and mysterious staff that the pirates use to keep the monsters prisoner, he manages to snare it and free himself and Medusa. Later, with the help of the other two Gorgons on the island, they are able to free the remaining monsters who eventually all find happy homes on the island.

They might have remained happily ensconced on the island for many years to some, however, in a surprising twist, the surviving pirate escapes and goes to King Polydectes spinning a tale of treachery and murder on the part of the monsters. The King naturally assigns Perseus to take care of the monsters...however he (Perseus) is unable to raise a band of heroes in the traditional manner so he resorts to a bit of trickery (promising riches that don't exist) and begs the aid of his father Zeus (who here is a selfish, absent minded pig of a man) to accomplish the task. The story continues as Corydon and his monster friends make plans to defend themselves from the invading would be heroes. In a refreshing new twist that turns traditional Greek mythology right on its ear, Druitt gives us monsters that become heroes and heroes that become monsters and gods that are just slightly off center from their traditionally accepted positions.

This departure is what makes Corydon & the Island of Monsters so enjoyable...we're not being given the same old story in shiny new wrapper; we're getting the same old wrapper with a shiny new story in it! I found myself unable to put down this book, I was sick with worry for Medusa and her child...fearful for the Minotaur and Corydon as they traversed the depths of the Underworld (and this part of the story is some of the best reading in the entire book). It's a wonderful tale and I hope that many people will discover the joys and sorrows, triumphs and tribulations of Corydon, the monsters and all the others contained in these pages! The only "complaint" I can foresee anyone making about Corydon & the Island of Monsters is that is does go into who Medusa became the "monster" that she is in this story (for those unfamiliar with this myth, Medusa had sexual relations in the temple of Athena and was cursed for it by being turned into a monster). This particular part of the book is no more than a page or so and the actual act is alluded to only briefly. I didn't find it objectionable at all, as I find TV to show much more explicit sexual material on an ongoing basis all day, everyday. I thought the material presented here relevant to the mythos of the story and tastefully done. I give Corydon & the Island of Monsters 5 stars and am definitely looking forward to reading the next book in the series (Corydon & the Fall of Atlantis). One final note, the book contains a glossary of Greek terms with pronunciation to help readers with unfamiliar people and terms common in Greek mythology, my 10 year old found this to be very informative and helpful while reading the book!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars alicia watson, April 21, 2006
I like this book alot, because it showed a different way to looking at greek mytholgy.You look at Medusa in a different way you look at her as a mother to a baby a woman trying to make her way in the cruel world that does not accept her. Also a boy that was used as a scape-goat to rid the town of its "sins" this child shunned by is own mother finds his way to be a sheperd boy and gets mixed up in with some trouble.I cant tell you any more but all I have to say is that I did not want this book to end.

-Ali
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Good old-fashioned monsters without an Elmo in sight, April 3, 2006
When I am handed a brand new bright and beautiful book for children or teens for me to review, I shut myself into a personal sensory deprivation tank (of sorts). I refuse to read reviews of the book, hear opinions from other people, or even scan the bookflap attached to the novel. I want to walk into a book knowing absolutely nothing about it except the name of the author (and if I could get away from that detail you can bet I would). Often this method of denying myself extraneous info is silly and wouldn't affect my opinion of the novel one way or another. In the case of "Corydon and the Island of the Monsters", however, it was a godsend. Had I read the Author Note at the beginning of the book, my read would have been tainted by two items. Item Number One: The fact that the book was written by a mother/son team. Item Number Two: It is the first in a trilogy. If I had known about the whole mother/son mutual writing experience you could not have peeled the sneer off of my face with all the battery acid in the world. If I had known it was the first in a trilogy I would have read it with an additional moue of distaste that comes with finding yet ANOTHER first book in a series (are there no single volumes of books anymore?). Instead, I came into "Corydon" without any taint of expectation and found it to be a delightful and truly engrossing read. It's been a while since I've read a child or teen novel that made me so simultaneously fearful and enraptured by a tale's plot. This is a book with a steady and satisfying emotional core, not to mention a great grasp on mythology to boot.

Corydon lives alone as a shepherd on a hillside far from his island's villages. Years ago the boy was driven from his home by a crowd of angry villagers simply because he was cursed with the leg of a goat. At the time he was rescued from death by two powerful Gorgons that he never saw again. He often wonders what became of them, but that question is answered soon enough when Corydon is taken prisoner by a group of pirates and their traveling freak show. While there the boy makes the acquaintance of a very pregnant Medusa and together the two escape, free their fellow monsters, and find the Gorgons' home. All might have been fine too, had one of the pirates not gone to King Polydectes and told tales of a isle of monsters. The next thing you know that pompous hero Perseus has organized a huge army of men intent on the monsters' destruction. It all falls to Corydon to discover how best to defeat the men and save the monsters that have become his family. It is a journey that will take him to the halls of Time and the depths of Hades and back.

I didn't mean to fall in love with the characters in this book. Honestly, I didn't! But if ever a talented mother/son team there was, Diane Purkiss and Michael Downing are they. There's no silly Zizou Corder nonsense going on here. No, sir. The writing is so entrancing that when Perseus shows up on the island's shores you feel deeply worried for Medusa, her new baby, the Gorgons, and all the other monsters on the sunny isle. It doesn't help any that Corydon has found comfort in knowing that his new Gorgon mothers will never abandon him like his maternal one did. It helps even less that "Druitt" knows Greek myths and knows them rather well. About the time Medusa challenged Perseus to a duel I was gnawing my fingernails to the nub and ignoring every doorbell, phone ring, and spouse in the room. I had to know what was going to happen. It's the emotional tug of this book that really helps to ratchet up suspense. If you can read through this tale and NOT find yourself having trouble sleeping because you're worried about what's going to happen to the minotaur... well, my friend, you have no soul.

I don't know how intentional this was, but the scenes in which Perseus comes up with different methods by which to recruit men into his misbegotten war... well they all strike the reader as a touch (how shall I say?) familiar. Perseus is able to make the idea of an attack on the monsters into the stuff of patriotism. Two of the characters in this book, faced with hard times, go off to fight because their sister has shamed them into action. When the war doesn't go particularly well Perseus always has a new lie or stretched truth to goad his men onward. Whether or not "Druitt" is making an intentional parallel with a somewhat similar situation today, I don't know. But it isn't hard to make that tiny leap in logic from one poorly thought out war to another. Just a thought.

Myths are hot stuff these days. Walk into a bookstore now and you'll see everything from last year's "Lightning Thief" by Rick Riordan to that silly book series who's name escapes me where each mythological hero or monster is given a humorous tale of their own. The authors of "Corydon" did have their own tendencies towards silliness in this book, of course. At one point the men are offered a six free "limited edition... individually crafted clay statues of monsters and heroes" when they enlist. The modern Happy Meal-type giveaways are funny but the humor actually runs a little counter to the tone of most of the book. But such problems are small potatoes. When you consider that this book was somehow made as a collaboration between a mother and a son and features some of the tenderest scenes between a boy who needs a mother and mothers who need a son... well it just defies any kind of logic. As I said before, I'm happy my method of utter and complete ignorance allowed me to enjoy this book fully. Now I can only hope that the other two books in the series live up to their predecessor.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
golden hoard, bronze wings, metal giant, winged sandals
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Lady Nagaina, Nemean Lion, Hall of Poesis, North Star, Isle of Monsters, River Styx, Cave of the Nymphs, Weaving Girl
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