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164 pages, Paperback
First published October 1, 2007
‘[D]o myths spring fully formed from the imagination and the needs of a society, I sad, as if they emerged from society’s subconscious? Or are myths conscious creations by the various money-making forces? For instance, is advertising a new kind of myth-making?’

In Crete the human couple of Ligdus and Telethusa are expecting a child. The father tells the wife that as girls are too much trouble if instead of a boy they get a girl, she will be killed. One night the mother has a dream and the goddess Io, surrounded by a whole array of Egyptian deities, appears to her and tells her not to be afraid about the sex of her child: whether it is a boy or a girl she, Io, will protect her. When Telethusa gave birth to a girl the mother proceeded to pretend her daughter was a boy and dressed her and rose her as such. He/She was called Iphis, after the grandfather. When Iphis turned thirteen she/he was arranged in marriage to the beautiful girl Ianthe. They had been educated together and loved each other.
Iphis felt a great deal of trouble; she/he was in love with her girl-friend but she thought that girls cannot love girls. She thought it was unnatural. She could not think of any other species in which there had been pairing between two females – across species yet, but not between the same sex. She even thought of invoking the ingenious Daeadalus and see whether he could find a solution. But to no avail.
When the wedding came Telethusa in despair visited the temple of the Egyptian goddess Isis (she is identified as Io -- there is a Temple dedicated to Isis in Pompeii) and received some signal signs.
Back at the wedding, as it proceeds, Iphis is gradually transformed into a male youth. And everyone is happy.


She was the most beautiful boy I had ever seen in my life