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Zeus: King of the Gods (Olympians) [Hardcover]

George O'Connor (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

January 5, 2010 9 and up4 and upOlympians
George O'Connor is a Greek mythology buff and a classic superhero comics fan, and he's out to remind us how much our pantheon of superheroes (Superman, Batman, the X-Men, etc) owes to mankind's ORIGINAL superheroes: the Greek pantheon.
 
In OLYMPIANS, O'Connor draws from primary documents to reconstruct and retell classic Greek myths. But these stories aren't sedate, scholarly works. They're action-packed, fast-paced, high-drama adventures, with monsters, romance, and not a few huge explosions. O'Connor's vibrant, kinetic art brings ancient tales to undeniable life, in a perfect fusion of super-hero aesthetics and ancient Greek mythology.
 
Volume 1 of OLYMPIANS, ZEUS: King OF THE GODS, introduces readers to the ruler of the Olympian Pantheon, telling his story from his boyhood to his ascendance to supreme power. 

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Zeus: King of the Gods (Olympians) + Hera: The Goddess and her Glory (Olympians) + Athena: Grey-Eyed Goddess (Olympians)
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Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal

Grade 4 Up—This 12-volume series debuts with the origins of Zeus. O'Connor begins his retelling by starting from literally nothing. Then a simple brown circle introduces readers to Gaea, or Mother Earth. The creation of Olympians unfolds slowly with simple straightforward lines and silhouettes. Dark browns and blacks echo the early development of the Titans. The first fully rendered face is that of the infant Zeus, with his birth symbolized in a pastel palette. This new race of Gods is visually and strikingly different. Zeus's virility and vitality both bring the story to life and make it accessible to young readers. Zeus's encounters with gods, particularly his battle with his father Kronos, are visually compelling. Images of grasping hands, thunderbolts, close-up visages, gaping holes in the earth, and silhouetted bodies bring Zeus's struggle for dominance into clear focus. Oversize panels reinforce the heroic proportions of the story. It is telling that from such a simple beginning, the complex story is able to evolve naturally to a satisfying conclusion, as depicted on the final page showing Zeus and the new race of numerous immortal gods. O'Connor clearly hints throughout the retelling that more stories are forthcoming: "And that is a tale for another day." Endpapers show the Olympian Family Tree. Back matter includes an author's note, notation of Greek words, discussion questions, and recommended reading. This ultimate superhero story will appeal to anyone who enjoys Greek mythology or great comic art.—Barbara M. Moon, Suffolk Cooperative Library System, Bellport, NY
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

O’Connor unveils his new Olympians graphic-novel series with this story of the daddy of Greek gods. Most immediately striking about this, aside from the exciting artwork, is the care O’Connor takes to visualize the creation myth that begins with Gaea creating and taking as a husband the sky, Ouranos. Their children—the Titans and other proto-Olympian entities—are often neglected or at best murkily covered, but here they’re vividly portrayed with all the magnificence of their beyond-good-and-evil power. After this breathtaking and lengthy sequence, Zeus enters the scene to grow from a feisty nymph-needling youth to a lightning bolt–wielding avenger. The extended, earth-shattering battle he wages with his father, Kronos, takes up the bulk of the story, delivering page after page of cataclysmic blows with the sensibility and hyperkinetic pacing of a literary superhero comic. While O’Connor includes a generous bounty of bonus materials to gratify myth hounds, this series could well become the initiation point for a new cadre of acolytes. New volumes should come quickly, with Athena's book due in April 2010. Grades 5-9. --Ian Chipman --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 9 and up
  • Hardcover: 80 pages
  • Publisher: First Second (January 5, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1596436255
  • ISBN-13: 978-1596436251
  • Product Dimensions: 10 x 7.6 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #540,632 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

George O'Connor is the author of several picture books, including the New York Times bestseller Kapow!, Ker-Splash, and Sally and the Some-thing. His debut graphic novel, Journey into Mohawk Country, was published by First Second. O'Connor's current project is The Olympians, a series of graphic novels for young readers about Greek Mythology. He is over 7 foot tall, and is the handsomest man in the world.

 

Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
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21 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars By the lightning bolt of Zeus!, January 10, 2010
This review is from: Zeus: King of the Gods (Olympians) (Hardcover)
Girl walks into my library. I'm putting her age at around nine, maybe ten. Asks if I have any books on Ancient Greece. Turns out the kid is so into Greek mythology that she is willingly learning more about the true history behind that area of the world for her own personal knowledge. In other words, she is every children's librarian's dream patron. I show her what we have and then we get to talking about mythology. She's a huge fan of the "D'Aulaires' Book of Greek Myths" so we start talking fiction. Has she read "The Lightning Thief" and other Rick Riordan titles? Roll of the eyes. Of course. Has she read Anne Ursu's Cronus Chronicles starting with "The Shadow Thieves"? Double roll of the eyes. All right. Has she read the brand-spanking new Olympians series coming out via First Second, illustrated by George O'Connor, and reimagined as graphic novels? Not only had she not heard of it but she was practically clawing my eyes out when I informed her that I didn't have a copy on the shelf at the moment. Kids love myths. Kids also love comics. Put the two together by a guy who actually knows how to turn a crazy myth into a comprehensible, even dramatic story, and you've got a natural pairing that is going to have your patrons, big and small, hungering for more. Buy in bulk.

"In the time before time, there was nothing, Kaos. From out of Kaos came Ge, or Gaea, our Mother Earth." So begins a tale of how the Titans and, subsequently, the Greek Gods came to be. The world is formed, and the Titan Kronos eats each of his children as they are born. However, he misses Zeus, the youngest child, and as a result that particular god is able to grow up, free his siblings, and take arms against the Titans for control of the earth itself. In an exciting comic book style, George O'Connor accurately depicts the tale of Zeus, leaving off the story to continue with Athena, the next in the series, published as a separate book. Endmatter includes an Author's Note, G(r)eek Notes as they apply to specific panels and pages, Greek myth character trading card-type pages, a Bibliography, recommended reads, amusing discussion questions (#1: "Zeus's dad tries to eat him. Has your dad ever tried to eat you?"), and an accurate but complex Olympians Family Tree on the front cover that you'll find yourself poring over again and again.

George O'Connor may be best known to some of us as the bloke behind "Journey Into Mohawk Country" and Adam Rapp's "Ball Peen Hammer". On the picture book side of things, he did "Kapow!" (yet another comic-inspired title, and a popular one in my library at that). With this book he had one big hurdle to leap: Make the myths logical. The thing about the Greek myths is that you can read them on paper all you like but some things are just not gonna make a whole lot of sense. For example, we hear that Hestia has been so long on the stomach of Kronos that she has nearly been digested and barely has a form of her own. All right, smart guys. Go illustrate that. More difficult still is that if you're making these myths into a single concrete understandable story, how do you explain Zeus falling in love with his sister? The author finds a way, and his words are not without their own rhythm and beauty. I liked little things, like Rhea feeding her husband a stone baby instead of Zeus and the consequent line, "If Lord Kronos noticed his newborn son had less warmth than the rest, he gave no sign." On top of that, O'Connor tells the story with a structure that makes sense. The repeated line that "Mother Earth was still unhappy, for she loved all her children," is what leads to the defeat of the Titans and the rise of the gods on the one hand, and perhaps the eventual destruction of the gods later on down the road.

The art is heavily inspired by O'Connor's beloved comic books of yore. He explains in his Author's Note his love of "The Mighty Thor" as a kid. "I remember staring at it, trying to comprehend whether I loved it or hated it. The story was full of all those enormous, bigger-than-life beasts I remembered from my copy of Edith Hamilton's mythology." If Greek gods are our original superheroes (or super villains) then it's natural to draw them as such. We've already seen some children's books do this ("The Mighty 12: Superheroes of Greek Myth" by Charles R. Smith, illustrated by P. Craig Russell comes instantly to mind), so it makes a certain amount of sense. One difference from comic books is the fact that while the men tend to go around shirtless and ripped, the ladies aren't all that busty. Fair play to O'Connor, then. And I did enjoy the fact that comic book facts keep working their way into the notes at the end of this book. We're told that the Adamantine that Kronos's sickle is made out of is where Wolverine in X-Men get his adamantium claws. Or that the Cyclopes are like Cyclops the X-Men leader. Actually... thinking about it now, all the comic facts seem to be about X-Men. I suppose the Wonder Woman facts will have to wait for a later volume in the series when we finally meet the Amazons.

The actual art in this book has all kinds of small details as well. Kronos cut open his father the sky, so his eyes and mouth show only the cosmos. His wife, Rhea, is also the daughter of the sky and the earth, but her pupils are crescent moons, blue on blue. Baby Zeus, meanwhile, is raised in a cave and in one panel looks out at the sky. One cannot help but notice that the stalactites lining the image look like teeth, reminding you of Kronos who has eaten Zeus's kin. So without a word you are reminded that Zeus has temporarily exchanged one mouth for another.

Admittedly, there is zippo racial diversity in the images here. O'Connor isn't challenging any preconceived notions of what one god or another looks like. By the end Zeus even has a white beard. The closest you get to a change is a brown-haired Aphrodite. I suppose the argument for keeping them white was that Greek gods are generally pretty scummy people, and would you really want to diversify their flaws? Still, in this day and age it's hard to do an all-white cast for anything, even a children's graphic novel.

Greek myths are many things, but child friendly? I think all of us can remember hearing one myth or another as a child that didn't quite make sense. Apollo chased a girl to get a kiss and she was so freaked out she asked to be turned into a tree. Huh? And how exactly did Zeus turning into a swan lead to Leda giving birth anyway? And don't even get me started on the changes Disney made to that lamentable "Hercules"! Hera is Hercules' loving mom? Puh-leeze. In this first Olympian title, O'Connor therefore has the unenviable job of telling a story straight without making it, uh, explicit. Zeus, after all, is the original letch. So you do see him chasing girls without seeing them get caught. That's how O'Connor plays it, and it works pretty well. Admittedly he pokes fun at the material sometimes, and there is a line in "Zeus" that adults will raise an eyebrow at, but kids won't get at all. At one point Zeus says that as a kid he used to think he could reach into the sky and take the moon. Metis informs him that Selene, the moon, is much bigger than he is. His response? "I don't know... I can grow pretty big." You don't need to even see Metis's "Heh" in response to get that one. Accurate characters and personalities. Still pretty kid-friendly in the end.

What I love about this is that not only is O'Connor releasing one book per god, but he's doing it so that the story from one book carries on into the next. This must have taken a fair bit of wrangling and shifting on his part. I'm sure O'Connor's natural inclination was to place "Hera" after "Zeus", but for reasons that we will learn soon enough he made "Athena" #2. It will probably have something to do with the fact that Athena's mother, Metis, has a relatively large role in this book, and that storyline has not been wrapped up yet.

When she was quizzing me on this new series, my young patron asked desperately, "I love Hestia. No one ever pays any attention to Hestia. Will there be a book about Hestia?" There will be, I assured her. There will be a book on each of the twelve gods and kids will be allowed to find their favorites instantly. Comics aren't for everyone, and there are plenty of folks content with what the D'Aulaires have to offer, but definitely keep an eye out for O'Connor's series just the same. Exciting, accurate, and intense, it's bound to be instantly beloved of kids, all thanks to its classic comic inspirations.

Ages 9 and up.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Fantastic Adventure Story, June 21, 2010
This review is from: Zeus: King of the Gods (Olympians) (Hardcover)
The story of the Greek gods is perfectly suited for adaptation to comics. They're all visually interesting--there's the Titans, all rocky and brown creatures that have sprung from the earth, and the Olympians, the fair-skinned and beautiful children of the Titans--and they possess powers and abilities that even the most powerful of superheroes would envy.

Plus, the Greek Pantheon has been the inspiration for more than a few superheroes, some more obviously than others. Artist and writer George O'Connor, however, has gone back (way back) to the original source material for his Olympians series. Like all myths, the story has changed substantially in some places throughout the centuries. But O'Connor's painstaking research delves into the more authentic original versions. He begins his series, naturally, with Zeus, king of the gods and the one charged with bringing about the downfall of his own father. The hardest tasks always fall to the youngest chidren, don't they?

Zeus is the only one of his siblings not swallowed whole by his father, Cronus. Instead, he is hiden away out of Cronus's sight until he reaches adulthood and begins to be spurred on to war against Cronus by his grandmother, Mother Earth herself. He does as she commands, and in doing so rescues the rest of Cronus's children, and the war between the Olympians and the Titans is waged in full, lasting years.

It's a fantastic adventure story, and O'Connor illustrates it beautifully. He also includes several handy texts that help flush out his work here: lineage charts, a guide to the spelling of the names, a history and recommended reading. All of it is extremely useful, for both casual readers and students who wish to learn more.

The book does have its share of violence, of course, and subsequent volumes focusing on the rest of the Pantheon no doubt will have much more. It's never too gory, though, and even matters of sexuality and romance are handled quite tamely. That is to say, younger readers will not see much at all to shock their sensibilities, and older readers will be able to take in the clues from the text in order to read between the lines.

-- John Hogan
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply breath-taking, May 7, 2010
George O'Connor has done a marvelous job on "Zeus, King of the Gods." As a matter of fact, his interpretation of the story of Zeus is soo smooth...(how smooth is it?). It is so smooth that with all the Zeus/Posideon/Hades/Cyclops/Titans mythologies that this book presents it ultimately clear and makes sense of the twisted tales.

Mr O'Connors' narration is simple, powerful, and pointed. The art, I assume by O'Connor, is very clear and cinematic. Some panels, all you need is the sound of thunder to make them complete. Coverwise, the lightening bolt held by Zeus shimmers with power!

O'Connor presents not only the story of Zeus, but the stories surrounding the imprisonment of the Titans, his brothers and sisters and despise for his father. Truly, this book reads almost like Hercules except there is not comedic relief! There is no Phil, nor Meg, but there is duty, sacrifice, honor, and a cosmic style battle that truly cracks the skies! Did I mention the art is top notch?

Being part I of 12, I look forward to the remaining books, Athena, Hera, and Hades.

[...]

Truly a stylish presentation of the story of Zeus.

Long may he rule!
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