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This Immortal Heart

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THIS IS THE OLDEST LOVE STORY OF ALL TIME . . .

Aphrodite, Goddess of Love, wields unparalleled power over every divine and mortal heart. Mistaken to be all beauty, no brains, she is in fact the most dangerous of all, driven by passion regardless of the consequences.

While on the surface, Ares, God of War, is her opposite –disliked by everyone and devoted to stirring up conflict – the two are more alike than they realise, each causing havoc for gods and mortals as they rule their primal realms.

These gods are no more immune to the dizzying highs and lows of love and loss than anyone else and before long, they are irresistibly drawn to one another. But there’s only so much room for fire and passion in Zeus’ kingdom, and whilst the God of War may be capable of greater love than anyone else, so may the Goddess of Love be capable of the gravest mistakes.

389 pages, Paperback

First published June 9, 2026

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About the author

Jennifer Saint

8 books7,526 followers
Jennifer Saint is a Sunday Times bestselling author. Her debut novel, ARIADNE, was shortlisted for Waterstones Book of the Year 2021 and was a finalist in the Goodreads Choice Awards Fantasy category in 2021. Her second novel, ELEKTRA, comes out in 2022 and is another retelling of Greek mythology told in the voices of the women at the heart of the ancient legends.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 482 reviews
Profile Image for Hades ( Disney's version ).
301 reviews117 followers
July 10, 2026
Thank you, NetGalley and Ballantine Books, for an ARC of This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint.

🌟4.5🌟

Those who have been around these parts know that I absolutely love mythology, especially Greek mythology. Does that make me biased? Perhaps. But one could also argue that it makes me a tougher critic. Either way, this was a book I really enjoyed for several reasons.

I appreciate how it branched out and explored gods and goddesses we don't usually hear much about. Sometimes I find mythology based stories can feel a bit choppy, but this one flows exceptionally well. The story itself is engaging and exciting, making it easy to get swept up in the narrative.

You can clearly tell this was written by someone who is also deeply passionate about mythology. It's most definitely worth reading if, like me, mythology is your jam. And if you've been looking to dip your toes into the genre, this would be an excellent place to start.



Until next time
Hades
🩵
Profile Image for Liana Gold.
482 reviews365 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
June 6, 2026
3.5-3.75!
Ooh Aphrodite ❤️ FULL REVIEW TO FOLLOW!!!



This is a story of a love that can lead to ruin. Aphrodite, the goddess of love, comes face to face with Ares, the god of war, with whom she begins a love affair that spans mortal lifetimes. She begins to questions the gods' games and her role in the realm. The story highlights how central love is to her, above all else.

I am obsessed with Greek mythology and the world of the Olympians, so hope this is a winner.



Many thanks to NetGalley, Ballentine Publisher and the author, Jennifer Saint for an early copy.

Publication date: June 9, 2026
Profile Image for Lucy Goodfellow.
229 reviews25 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 1, 2026
Jennifer Saint offers an ambitious reimagining of one of Greek mythology’s most complex goddesses, but ultimately This Immortal Heart feels uneven in its execution. While there are moments of insight, the narrative arc struggles to build tension or fully explore the implications of its own creative choices.

One of the strongest aspects of the novel is the characterisation of Aphrodite herself. Saint presents her as thoughtful and observant, and there are glimpses of a more introspective goddess beneath the familiar veneer of beauty and desire. However, Aphrodite often feels frustratingly passive. Despite being positioned as a powerful, ancient deity, she frequently reacts to events rather than shaping them, which undercuts the authority and agency the narrative seems to promise. This passivity is especially noticeable in her relationship with Ares. Ares feels underdeveloped, and the emotional foundation of their relationship feels thin. There is not enough build-up to make their connection compelling, which weakens what should be one of the most dynamic and charged relationships in Greek myth.

The retelling itself is extremely loose, and while reinterpretation is expected, the degree of deviation here often diminishes the story’s stakes. The marriage narrative is significantly altered, along with Hephaestus’s character. Galatea fleeing to Artemis’ forests and becoming her lover feels trite. Moreover, Eros is already born and has no father, rather than being fathered by Ares. These choices feel arbitrary rather than purposeful. Because the story selectively reshapes mythological elements without fully committing to the consequences of those changes, it becomes difficult to feel any real tension. The plot seems to pick and choose which myths to honour based on convenience, rather than using them to build a coherent internal logic.

The decision to make Aphrodite the daughter of Ouranos rather than Zeus is one of the more intriguing decisions, but it is not explored deeply enough. This origin should give Aphrodite a vastly different perspective from the Olympians—particularly given her references to being older than Ares and other gods. However, the calamity of her birth feels more like an afterthought than a defining aspect of her character. It rarely informs her decision-making or worldview in a meaningful way. Instead of delving into this unique perspective, the novel often falls back on extended sequences of plotting and name-dropping minor mythological figures—what readers have come to expect from Greek myth retellings, but without enough variation or emotional payoff to make them feel fresh. Without stronger character-driven tension or clearer thematic focus, these sections begin to feel repetitive.

Overall, while the novel has an interesting premise and a solid central character, it lacks narrative tension and emotional stakes. The looseness of the retelling, combined with underdeveloped relationships and missed opportunities for deeper character exploration, prevents the arc from fully realising its potential.

I received an advance review copy for free via NetGalley. I am leaving this review voluntarily 📚.
Profile Image for maria (will I fully comeback?).
251 reviews2,017 followers
June 26, 2026
LOVED LOVED LOVED THIS ONE SO MUCH!!!

to be honest, I don’t know anything about Greek mythology, like I couldn’t name a singular Greek god before reading this book lol and I think that’s a major reason why I enjoyed this book a lot, since I didn’t know anything about Ares and Aphrodite’s story I didn’t get bored while reading it.

The writing was amazing, it was so lyrical and immersive. This was also my first Jennifer Saint book but now I want to read all her other books😋


frtc later
Profile Image for rina.
227 reviews704 followers
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
May 24, 2026
‎ ‎ ੭୧‎ ‎ 3.5 stars‎ ‎ . ۫

These last few months have been incredibly chaotic and honestly put me into such a reading slump, but oh my gosh… this book gave me everything I needed 😭

I surprisingly took my time reading this one and savoured every word. It was such a beautifully written and entertaining story. The romance felt gentle and fresh, and I adored every minute spent with Aphrodite and Ares together.

Of course, like all of Jennifer Saint's retellings, I really appreciated the feminist perspective woven throughout the story. The pacing was also perfect for me, and while the writing is simple, it still felt lush and captivating.

I will say I was not quite as invested in Part 3 or the larger conflicts between the gods. The love story was by far my favourite aspect, and honestly, I wish it had been even more of the focal point.

Overall though, this felt like such a lovely breath of fresh air, and I would definitely recommend!

‎ ‎ ‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ “ You were my life, ” he says simply.
‎ ‎ ‎‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ ‎ “ Always. ”


Thank you to Jennifer Saint and Ballantine for the ARC! This Immortal Heart releases June 9, 2026.

CW: death, violence

────

finished: 05/23/26 𖥻𓈒 ꒱ ੭
this was just what i needed right now!!

pre read: 05/21/26 𖥻𓈒 ꒱ ੭
i haven't read a greek mythology book in soo long, but after hearing this one is an aphrodite x ares retelling, i just had to pick it up asap! this looks like a great palate cleanser, which i desperately need right now bc i'm in a mini slump 😕
Profile Image for Noi (in & out) .
1,057 reviews602 followers
Did Not Finish
July 8, 2026
Soft DNF- I think this is a book I need to read and not listen to. Something in the narration is not working for me.
==============
I have 3 days to read this, do you think I'll make it?
Profile Image for Katie’s Bookshelf.
701 reviews117 followers
June 27, 2026
4.5⭐️
"A god who thrives on chaos... whose wildness can be tamed only by me."
Wow I really loved this. I've enjoyed JS's past novels but this is easily her best, in my opinion. It definitely has a more upbeat and hopeful tone- this is the goddess of love, after all- and leans into the romance, which as a romance reader I personally loved.

The depictions of both Aphrodite and Ares were refreshing, in my opinion. So often Aphrodite is shown as self-absorbed and fickle, often using her gift of love to play with those around her. Here we see a goddess who just loves love. She genuinely cares about her followers and wants to make the world a better place, with as much love as possible in it. She tries to keep the peace on Olympus and ease the discord between the other gods and goddesses, while also caring about the mortals they reign over.

Ares too had a depth to him- he's not a raging hot-head who's only care is violence. He goes to war because that's just who he is- he can't stop it any more than Aphrodite can stop being the goddess of love. He acknowledges the ugliness in it and concedes maybe one day, war will cease to exist.

I adored the romance between these two. The myths of their affair are of course famous- but here it had such longing and angst. I loved the scenes we got of Ares looking out for Aphrodite and returning to Mount Olympus again and again for her. He was so soft and different with her, which as she knows is a side that only she ever got to see.

Profile Image for Holden Wunders.
396 reviews127 followers
June 22, 2026
This is a really difficult one for me to rate as I genuinely think my own personal rating will differ from the majority of readers so take that with a grain of salt.

I took a good chunk of time off of mythology retellings after the craze took off and Madeline Miller did her thing. We saw an influx of retellings and while part of me loves that because I LOVE mythology, there was a lot of trash in the mix as everyone put out what they could as fast as they were able.

Years ago, I read Ariadne and it was one of the last retellings I recall reading. I felt like it was average as well and decided I should take some time off the genre and really be picky going forward. Years later, I figured I would give This Immortal Heart a try aa Aphrodite is weirdly so beloved and yet largely unexplored. But this also just fell so short for me and I’m questioning a lot of the tone, voice, and style that is going into retellings nowadays more than anything else.

It’s not that this book is inherently bad by any means, but it does read more as YA. Of course there are going to be some more “adult” and heavier subjects but I’ve read a lot of YA that tonally handles themes and subjects in a harsher light that makes it more adult. But I felt the tone and plot was so lackluster and quite frankly, juvenile. I’m not sure if I’m the only one that’s been feeling this way but it truly read like an average romantasy protagonist and not the actual goddess Aphrodite. She could’ve been anyone and it made reading and connecting the mythos I’m so in love with impossible. And this is not to say I’m shitting on romantasy or any other genre as there’s gold intermingled everywhere. But I just truly couldn’t read this as a mythos retelling and to me, isn’t that the whole point?
Profile Image for Ellery Adams.
Author 63 books5,423 followers
July 4, 2026
3.5 stars.

Thanks to @prhaudio for the gifted audiobook.

Aphrodite has always been my least favorite goddess, but after reading Jennifer Saint's retelling, I realized that my perception of her has been formed by stories in which she has been depicted as vain and vapid. I didn't give her enough credit for being more than what ancient myth made her out to be, In this novel, the Goddess of Love is devoted to her worshippers and cares more for humans than most of the gods. She also makes mistakes and admits to errors, which was refreshing. I liked her scenes when she was alone best. I was less interested in her romance with Ares. To me, it takes away from her story. If anything, I would've liked to hear more about Hephaestus, but that's a personal preference. I've always liked him and believe he and Aphrodite had much in common because of their devotion to humankind. The audiobook performance was excellent!
Profile Image for Lucy.
502 reviews788 followers
June 2, 2026
4.5****

I really enjoyed this retelling!! This is probably my second favourite of Jennifer Saints (Ariadne will forever hold my heart).

I was so excited going into this book and I was not disappointed. This book is solely from the perspective of Aphrodite.

Jennifer’s take on Aphrodite was refreshing (and Ares too!!), it was so nice to see Aphrodite portrayed as a more gentle Goddess (I feel she is usually portrayed in Greek myth/retellings as very egotistical and a bit flighty). It showed her role as a goddess, the interactions with other gods, and how her and Ares come together. I especially enjoyed her love of mortals and her strong empathy skills.

I really loved reading Ares and Aphrodite together. The grumpy / dark and mysterious man and the goddess who seems his opposite in every way. How they are drawn together was beautiful. It was also great to see the character of Ares more fleshed out and a new perspective of him (I find he is usually written as a bit of a brutal idiot in other books/telling of Greek mythology).

Jennifer writes in a beautiful lyrical way and her descriptions are so vivid that I had no issue imagining the beauty of some of the scenes.

Again, with her other retellings, the author seamlessly interweaves different Greek myths into the story. I was highly curious which myths Jennifer Saint would include in this retelling as Aphrodite in mentioned in a lot of them! And I was excited to uncover myths I had never heard of before.

Will I be buying this when it comes out? Absolutely!!

Thank you to NetGalley for the E-ARC
Profile Image for Nicola Doyle.
615 reviews20 followers
June 6, 2026
This Immortal Heart was a wonderful read. I really enjoyed the story and the concept is good. The cover is beautiful but I feel understated. The colours are great and they pop. It's eye-catching. The writing is excellent and the story flowed beautifully. I loved the element of Greek Mythology. It was obvious just how much Jennifer invested into the research of Greek Mythology. The setting was good and I thought I worked well. Jennifer's world-building was strong. I liked the characters. It was great reading about Aphrodite and Ares and watching their story unfold. If you enjoy Greek Mythology you will definitely enjoy this book.
Profile Image for The Bookish Elf.
3,073 reviews510 followers
June 12, 2026
Jennifer Saint has built her career on giving the women of Greek mythology room to breathe outside the narrow frames their original poets gave them. With This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint, she steps onto unfamiliar ground in two ways at once. First, she hands the narration to a goddess rather than a mortal woman. Second, she leans openly into romance for the first time, threading her usual mythological scholarship through the bones of a love story that her acknowledgements freely admit is her switch into the genre.

The result is a sensuous, slow-burning retelling of Aphrodite and Ares, an affair the ancient sources usually treated as gossip, scandal, or a punchline involving Hephaestus and a golden net. Saint takes that tabloid sliver and stretches it across centuries.

Premise and Setup, Spoiler-Free

Aphrodite tells her own story. She is newly born from sea-foam and her father's blood, comfortable in her power, devoted to her worshippers' secrets and the quiet pleasures she stirs in mortal and divine hearts alike. Her dalliances are brief and bright, and she is determined never to marry, having watched what marriage has done to Hera.

Then a battle she cannot prevent steals away a mortal she has just blessed with a second chance. The man behind the spear is Ares, brooding, untouchable, despised by most of Olympus. Their spheres of power could not be more opposed: she stirs longing, he stirs war. Beneath the friction, the two recognise something of themselves in each other. What follows is a courtship pulled taut between desire, divine politics, and the bargains gods are forced to make in Zeus's court.

The Voice in This Book

Saint writes Aphrodite in a register that feels deliberately drawn from her source material:

A languorous, sensory prose style indebted to Sappho and Ovid
Long looping sentences thick with petals, oils, salt, smoke, and skin
A first-person narrator who is amused, observant, slightly vain, and not above admitting it
Cool, quick dialogue that offsets the lyrical interior monologue

Readers who came to her through Hera, Atalanta, Elektra, or Ariadne will recognise her instinct for plain emotional clarity inside ornate sentences. But Aphrodite is a different kind of narrator. She is a goddess speaking in her prime, not a girl looking back on a tragedy, and the book takes its tonal cues from her appetite for the world.

What the Book Does Well

A few craft choices come through as genuinely strong:

The mortal interludes. Phaon, Pygmalion's Galatea, Pandora, Iphis, and Adonis each anchor a self-contained novella in miniature stitched into the larger arc, and they carry much of the book's moral weight.
The reframing of familiar episodes. Hephaestus's exile, Pandora's jar, the trial at the Areopagus. Saint diverges from the versions she used in her earlier novel Hera, and the author's note is refreshingly honest about why.
The chemistry. Ares is written with restraint rather than posturing. He listens before he speaks, and the slow accumulation of his presence in Aphrodite's thoughts is one of the book's best-paced threads.
The Amazons sequence. The detour to Scythia, drawn from Adrienne Mayor's nonfiction work, gives the second half fresh geographic and emotional air.
Where the Cracks Show

For a romance promising sparks between fire and passion, the early courtship sometimes runs cooler than the blurb suggests. Saint's lyrical instincts occasionally smother the heat she is supposed to be generating, and a few central encounters are described with so much atmospheric language that the bodies and stakes inside them go a little soft.

Other readers may stumble on these points:

Aphrodite's mortal lovers in the first hundred pages can blur into one another, since they share a rhythm of meeting, melting, and moving on.
The Olympian council scenes carry useful exposition but slow the pulse whenever they appear back to back.
Hephaestus, who carries enormous narrative weight, is granted less interiority than the central pair, which makes one major turn in part two feel more engineered than inevitable.
The mortal subplots are sometimes so vivid that the central romance suffers by comparison.

None of these are fatal flaws, but they explain why the book reads, even to admirers, as a strong four-out-of-five rather than a clear five.

Where This Sits in Saint's Wider Work

This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint is her fifth novel. Ariadne was the breakout, Elektra and Atalanta both hit number one on the Sunday Times list, and Hera reframed the queen of Olympus through her grievances and her dignity. Set against those, this is the warmest book she has written. Less brutal than Elektra, less wounded than Ariadne, less politically claustrophobic than Hera. It is the book of an author granting herself permission to enjoy her gods.

It is also the first of her novels where the protagonist openly wants pleasure, and where the page lingers on it without flinching. For longtime readers, that loosening of register is the most interesting evolution on offer.

Who Will Love It

Anyone expecting a fast paranormal romance in togas may need to recalibrate. This is mythology first, romance second. It is best suited for:

Readers who loved Madeline Miller's Circe and want a similarly reflective, first-person goddess voice
Fans of Natalie Haynes who enjoy mythological retellings with a feminist edge
Romance readers willing to trade urgency for atmosphere
Anyone who has wanted Saint to give the gods themselves the microphone

If you prefer the tighter dread of Ariadne or the white-hot vengeance of Elektra, you may find this softer at the edges. That softness is, I think, part of its argument.

Closing Thoughts

This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint is not a flawless novel, but it is a confident one. Saint knows what her readers come to her for, and she gives them that while also taking a real risk in opening the door to romance. The book glows more than it burns, ruminates more than it races, and makes a quietly radical case inside its mythological frame: love is not weaker than war, it just outlasts it. For readers willing to sit inside that argument, This Immortal Heart by Jennifer Saint is a generous, lyrical addition to her body of work, and a promising opening if she chooses to write more in this register.
Profile Image for emi.
678 reviews1,150 followers
June 18, 2026
3.75/5 stars

The first 2/3 of this book was sooo good. 5 stars actually. It’s been way too long since I’ve picked something up with writing that is actually good. But unfortunately, the last 1/3 of this book lost me a bit. I think I was just hoping for different drama. More scandal maybe.
Profile Image for Lizzy Brannan.
342 reviews27 followers
2026-reads
June 28, 2026
I am currently trying to calm down from this book, wipe tears of joy away, and gather my focus. This was THE BEST retelling of any Greek god or goddess I've encountered. It was beauty. It was war. It was romance. It was pain. It was longing. It was ethereal.

"Hurt and grief are not the price of love; they are testaments to its strength"

Aphrodite was not born as the other gods. She was born of the sea, fully formed, endowed with striking beauty and ancient power. She is the goddess of love. Fulfilled in her temple, hearing and answering the prayers of her people, she longs to bring mortals together. She is also known to enjoy her own frivolous moments of passion. But duty calls, and it's time for another council meeting on Olympus. And when Ares, the wrathful god of war no one likes, finally makes an appearance, she does not realize she will be spending centuries fighting her own battle between her heart drawn to him and her duty to her people. After all, the gods play games unfairly.

"Love is always the antidote to loss, the balm to any wound."

I was captivated by the crafting and evolution of Aphrodite and Ares. Not only was I drawn to their love affair, but their internal struggles and how they interacted with their worshippers were masterfully executed. I was especially drawn to the shorter stories created within each prayer lifted up to Aphrodite, her method of communication with mortals, and her secretive observances. I can't imagine it would be a small feat to create the inner monologues of the goddess of love. And yet, Jennifer Saint exceeded my expectations. There's no question. This is well-written. It wasn't cheesy, cringey, nor did it follow any common fantasy trope. I enjoy Saint's books, but this one is next level.

Thank you so much NetGalley, Jennifer Saint, and Ballantine Books for this eARC in exchange for my raving, yet honest review.
Profile Image for Sarah Kimberley.
230 reviews9 followers
June 12, 2026
Jennifer has spun yet another breath stealing Greek tapestry in This Immortal Heart. I am lost for words. This is one of the most beautiful, mythological pieces I have ever read. Sensual and full of this magnetic, pulling power 🏛️💘

Ares and Aphrodite: the oldest love story in Grecian history, and yet they began as the ultimate cosmic antithesis. The reviled Ares-shunned on Mount Olympus for his insatiable lust for bloodshed, and the charming Aphrodite: sprung to life from sea foam and in command of the heart and its chamber of desires. This isn’t an illicit tryst, this is a fierce insurrection against the meddling in Zeus’s court. You can really feel the headiness of it all coming off the page and into your bones. Saint’s Aphrodite is more dangerous than an army carrying a thousand bronze shields. The two together, threaten to tear Olympus apart at its very seams. It is utterly joyous. What a feast ✨

I absolutely love the way Saint pairs the terrifying, careless immortality of the gods with the fleeting, burning brilliance of a mortal life. She is excellent at conjuring a world of
divine politics and the agonizing cost of seeking liberty in a world that demands a goddess be a possession. The Olympians are suffocating tempests, and the mortals caught in their wake must learn to navigate a sea of celestial caprice. Aphrodite herself builds a fortress out of her own resilience 🏛️

When the Gods grow cold, the stories of those who loved and suffered in their shadows will forever burn with an inextinguishable, brilliant flame 🔥
Profile Image for Sarah Walters.
72 reviews8 followers
April 17, 2026
Thank you to the publishers for sending me an arc of this book!

3.5⭐️

I want to preface this by saying this is my first Greek mythology read and my first Jennifer saint book too. So I didn’t really know what to expect but I enjoyed it! Even though I don’t know the full lore about all the Greek gods, I enjoyed being introduced to them and other people we’ve all heard of before - Adonis, The Amazons etc

But I can’t comment on how accurate it is to the known mythological stories of Aphrodite out there as I’m unfamiliar.

The pacing was a little off and it felt like it was lots of little episodes but together rather than one full story. There also wasn’t much tension or build up at the end.

But I enjoyed the romance between the God of Love and the God of War and I did find myself not being able to put it down!

I will definitely be checking out Jennifer Saint’s other books because I love her writing!
Profile Image for Lucy.
62 reviews5 followers
June 16, 2026
This Immortal Heart takes such significant liberties with greek mythology that it simply wasn’t for me. It made me realise I personally prefer seeing those stories and characters remain a little more recognizable.

Case in point: I nearly started liking Aphrodite in this version. Considering I usually can’t stand her in most myths, that’s saying something. 😂
Profile Image for Geertje ~ witchybookmom.
575 reviews50 followers
July 3, 2026
I LOVED her other books, but this one didn't do it for me unfortunately
Aphrodite felt more like a teenage girl to me instead of a literal goddess??
The storyline itself felt so choppy as well.
Profile Image for Carrie Smith.
152 reviews13 followers
February 10, 2026
This retelling was a breath of fresh air, I’m so happy Jennifer chose to write a gentle Aphrodite. Usually portrayed as haughty and self obsessed it was refreshing to see her reimagined as kind and somewhat naive.

Hephaestus usually surly and abrupt is shy and a little awkward where Ares is harsh and uncompromising.

I was a little sad to see Hera back to being typecast as jealous and quarrelsome again after loving her story so much, though it is Aphrodite’s POV so I suppose that’s fair. But guess what every retelling continues to agree on? Zeus is still a prick.

As for the story, the tension between Aphrodite and Ares in part one is nothing short of exquisite. The events leading to the inevitable marriage in part two were a great take on the story, in fact this felt like a retelling of a retelling exploring different motivations with softer eyes and I actually loved this version so much.

This was such an enjoyable read, I sped through it and I already can’t wait to see who gets the Saint treatment next. (Athena PLEASE) 🙏🏼
Profile Image for Catherine Middleton.
5 reviews
May 23, 2026
As always I really enjoyed the latest book by Jennifer Saint, I’m not afraid to say I am a huge fan girl of all her books. This was a really interesting version of the Aphrodite and Ares story and a very different version, as Saint herself explains in the authors note after the events conclude. I loved the fully rounded out characterisation of these and other gods. No one dimensional archetypes here. Aphrodite so often depicted as selfish and single minded is a wonderfully feminist version of herself, the interlinked stories of mortals she comes across and helps all add to the interest. I loved her interactions with Eros and the pair of them oozed kindness and care towards mortals where it is so often portrayed otherwise. The Ares written here is deeply flawed but also sensitive, his loyalty to the females in his life is played out beautifully. Hera is shown in her usual aloof and detached manner here- a slight shock to the system after Saint’s treatment of her in the book of the same name. I loved this book and while the story lacked pace on occasion the characterisation and juxtaposition of ideals was wonderful. After reading so many novels set in Greek mythology I am always delighted when my preconceptions of the gods are challenged and my own views tested. Thought provoking and eye opening, this book certainly won my mortal heart. Thank you NetGalley for the ARC.
Profile Image for Kimberley.
293 reviews
April 26, 2026
This is a review following the receipt of an Advanced Reader Copy via NetGalley.

Firstly, thank you for the opportunity to read this ARC. This was a magnificent read, and I feel so lucky to have read it early! This was one of my most anticipated books of 2026 and it didn’t disappoint me at all.

I loved the angst, the action and the tension. Some depictions of Aphrodite have painted her in a more negative light, so it was also interesting to view her in another perspective.

Like all Greek mythology, what would it be without drama? I’d bring the popcorn every time Zeus appears on the page if I were you!

This was engaging from start to finish and has truly been a delight to read. Thank you so much!
Profile Image for Mella.
16 reviews11 followers
February 26, 2026
Thank you NetGalley and Ballantine Books for the ARC!

This Immortal Heart - Aphrodite’s novel was a fever dream set in the backdrop of the feuding Greek Gods. Rather than the often-portrayed flippant Goddess of Love, Jennifer Saint’s Aphrodite, is a Goddess who actually cares about the mundane affairs of her human worshippers and goes to great trouble to rectify errors she inadvertently fashioned. The tension between the God of War and the Goddess of Love was absolutely perfect, who knew that Ares was capable of such love?. What captivated me the most was her genuine friendship with Hephaestus and her entourage. Reading This Immortal Heart on the heels of completing Hera (which I also enjoyed immensely), I appreciate how little repetition there was of the events in the previous novel. It was also a sharp contrast in portraying how Aphrodite ‘managed’ Zeus and Poseidon with her wiles vs Hera’s vengeful wrath.

I am already looking forward to the next installment in Jennifer Saint’s World of Greek Mythology. This Immortal Heart is another dazzling jewel in her collection!
Profile Image for Michelle (Bamamele.reads).
1,415 reviews89 followers
May 30, 2026
Many thanks to Ballantine and PRHAudio for the preview. All opinions are my own.

4.5 stars

Jennifer Saint is a magician. Having read tons of mythology stories, it’s safe to say I actively disliked Aphrodite, Ares, and Hephaestus. But Saint made me feel so tenderly towards all three and desperately hope for a happy ending for them. This story was utterly entrancing and I loved it.

Aphrodite here is independent, caring, and loves deeply. She truly wants to positively answer the prayers of her followers, and sees encouraging love as beautiful mission. When someone is hurt or disappointed in love, she hurts with them. Ares and Hephaestus are both extremely sympathetic here too. Aphrodite hates that she cannot love Hephaestus, and he in turn is so poignantly sweet. Ares loves her deeply, and their love story is breathtaking. Their separation at one point is so painful.

Saint evokes so many emotions here. I cared deeply about these gods (not you Zeus and Poseidon, y’all still suck). I couldn’t put the book down and highly recommend. I also really enjoyed Lydia Leonard’s narration for the audio and would definitely recommend that format!
Profile Image for Michelle Skelton .
500 reviews12 followers
June 22, 2026
A beautifully written and surprisingly captivating retelling of Aphrodite.

The prose is lush, sensual, and immersive, perfectly matching the goddess at the center of the story.

Jennifer Saint portrays Aphrodite sympathetically without stripping away her vanity, selfishness, or flawed judgment, allowing her to remain recognizably mythological rather than simply admirable.

The relationship between Aphrodite and Ares leans into familiar romantic tropes, but the mythological context gives it greater weight.

The novel's exploration of beauty, desire, love, war, and the unintended consequences of power was far more interesting than the romance alone.

The first two-thirds are especially strong. The final portion meanders somewhat and resolves more neatly than I expected.

Given the ambiguity of Greek mythology, I almost wished Saint had left the ending more open to interpretation.

A thoroughly enjoyable read that reminded me why I continue to enjoy Jennifer Saint's mythology retellings.
Profile Image for Abi SF.
226 reviews
June 17, 2026
I have loved everything Saint has written, but this book is perhaps her best. Beautifully immersive mythological settings, developed and gripping character portrayal and interestingly unravelling plot lines.

Prior to this, I have always been interested in the ephemeral presentations of Aphrodite and Saint certainly didn't disappoint. However, I think it was the raw, brutal and somehow completely relatable presentation of Ares that really gripped me. Saint was able to keep his harsh, violent persona while making it seem completely understandable how the Godess of Love could fall so passionately in love with him.

An absolute joy to read!
Profile Image for saar.
20 reviews
July 6, 2026
wauw wauw wauuuw, my god ik vond dit een prachtig boek!!! ik hou van griekse mythologie en hoe veel mooie verhalen er verteld worden, en dit was echt alles waar ik op hoopte voor dit boek. de manier waarop hun liefde wordt verteld maar ook vooral aphrodite’s verhaal was geweldig en ik vond het gewoon heel goed! zeker een aanrader, ook als je niet veel over griekse mythologie weet want ik heb het idee dat deze wat toegankelijker was daar in dan bijv Circe. ik ga zeker meer van haar lezen!
Profile Image for Adri.
157 reviews2 followers
June 13, 2026
Espectacular.

Que alguien me de 100 más así.

Quiero releer y volver a vivir todo.

La forma tan poética de escribir de esta autora es impresionante.

Tiene que ser de mis libros favoritos de mitología. La forma de presentar a los personajes y de incluir tantos mitos y de una forma tan bonita es increíble.
Profile Image for Aina.
24 reviews
February 28, 2026
The first 100 pages were very slow to read. After that, it became enjoyable. 3.5⭐️
Profile Image for Fern.
19 reviews
March 31, 2026
An incredible and beautiful retelling, with a fresh take on Aphrodite. Saint weaves this story with so much passion and complexity it grips you from the very start, and it’s a breath of fresh air to read a version of Aphrodite that is a stark contrast to how she is perceived in other retellings, more gentle and thoughtful. Forever grateful for the ARC and couldn’t recommend this book enough!
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