It grew on me.
I was certainly intrigued with all the Greek mythology references (title, intro...) and without reading synopsis just dove in. Then comes Macy, North American girl, figuring out her place in this world, on her own, and my eyebrows furrow. What does that have to do with ancient Greece? So, I did not put the book down until I have read it all.
Overall, it starts a bit slow as the main characters are being introduced and there seems to be quite a few players, and that made it a bit tough as I had to make myself read on. But book does pick up once the events unfold and new rhythm evolves, fleeing from one and running towards the other. That's when I started noticing that writing changed as well, you feel more urgency, and you feel the lull, so the second half of the book, excellent.
It was visually appealing and it was easy to imagine the scenery, the smells, and the warmth as described as I am from Mediterranean parts and it all felt real and homey.
One last thing I question, build-up to mad, deep, everlasting love; I did not get it. They met, few events and tense moments later, they were in love. Yes it is love based on years of history and past yearnings... still, Jason wows that he loves Macy as Macy not Persephone, then I don't see it. I'd expect him to be more conflicting about what he feels for Macy and letting go of Persephone after all these years... I may have to give it a second read.
Light, visually appealing, lovely. I give it 3 out of 5 stars.
Tanja