“These books are set in the real oceans, and based on legends that have been told for thousands of years. The following titles can be used for enlightenment, or simple entertainment, if you liked the stories and settings that Poseidon’s Children describe.”
Further reading
For an introduction to Greek myths as the netmen tell them, there is no better narrator than Stephen Fry. “Mythos” describes the creation and the gods, while “Heroes” does what it says on the cover.
To read the myths as the Greeks themselves told them, Homer and Plato cannot be beaten; after all, Plato gave us the Atlantis myth in his “Timaeus” and “Critias.” After two myriad years, Homer is still, arguably, the best adventure storyteller of all time.
Plato: Timaeus and Critias
Homer: The Odyssey
Homer: The Iliad
For the netmen’s version of the story of the constellations, Susannah Hislop’s “Stories in the Stars” both draws the stars and tells their legends (for 0lder readers), while Grant Privett and Kevin Jones’ “The Constellation Observing Atlas” maps out the skies.
Stories in the Stars
The Constellation Observing Atlas
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