It is the middle of the 20th century and the Ancient Greek Gods and Goddesses come back to Earth to stop all the chaos the human kind has got into. With all their powers working perfectly, the Gods change the World overnight, banning all the wars, resolving crisis and making humans serve them once again. In the new order of things, history professor William Forrester is chosen to become a demi-God for Bacchus. His reluctant participation in the bacchanal leads him again to question his "honor" at his new position.
His pseudonyms include: Gordon Randall Garrett, Gordon Aghill, Grandal Barretton, Alexander Blade, Ralph Burke, Gordon Garrett, David Gordon, Richard Greer, Ivar Jorgenson, Darrel T. Langart, Blake MacKenzie, Jonathan Blake MacKenzie, Seaton Mckettrig, Clyde (T.) Mitchell, Mark Phillips (with Laurence Janifer), Robert Randall, Leonard G. Spencer, S.M. Tenneshaw, Gerald Vance.
Pagan Passions was published in 1959 by the Galaxy/Beacon line as by Randall Garrett and Larry M. Harris, a pseudonym of Laurence M. Janifer. The Beacon books were marketed as borderline erotic, though there's nothing even slightly graphic about this one by more modern standards; it's what they used to call spicy, saucy, or bawdy. It's an amusing look at a twentieth century society in which the ancient Greek gods have returned and taken over. We learn they're actually aliens from a more advanced civilization, an idea which has been used quite a lot in the field, and the ending is rather weak. I enjoyed listening to a funny and well produced reading thanks to Librivox.
This was a lot of fun. I got it for free on Amazon Kindle for my Droid phone. It may have been shocking at the time it was published, but it is a funny mystery, too, in a way. Why are the Greek Gods on Earth in the 20th Century? What a difference it makes to one's daily life. No wars. Humans in service to the Gods.
Forrester, a history professor and acolyte to the Goddess Athena, has women throwing themselves at him at an increasing clip. When he is chosen to become a demi-God for Bacchus, he has to put aside his distaste for their religion to serve. His reluctant participation in the bacchanal leads him again to question his "honor" at his new position.
A local used book store had a shelf of old pulp fiction paperbacks, and I picked this one up on a whim. It was a reminder of why these pulp fiction stories are remembered more for their cover art than for the writing.
A quick read. Interesting idea but not very fleshed out. Also, the title and cover make it seem kind of racy, but there are true Greek myths racier than this story.
This book is fun and frothy. It's about aliens who think they are ancient gods in modern day New York. If want some light and charming sf that's maybe a little dated, this book will delight.
Another will written fantasy passion short story by Randall Garrett as the title suggests passion is what the Gods are about as Fosestter becomes part of the gods. I would recommend this novella to readers looking for something different. Enjoy the adventure of reading all kinds of novels and books 👍. 🏡🔰👒😴 2022
That was certainly different! It is a short story that is a really quick read. A great idea for the time, kind of silly and funny and definitely entertainig and I'm glad I read it on kindle and did not pay for it, lol. At least I learned what a Myrmidon was. 2.75 stars
This felt like it had the potential to be really interesting but it kind of stuttered to a highly unsatisfactory conclusion leaving much unanswered and so little explored.
Another in the "youth of the 1950s - 1960s couldn't trust ever-so-sexy sci-fi cover illustrations" series.
The Greek Gods returned sixty years ago and solved the world's problems. Sure, human development seems to have stopped, but that isn't much of a concern to either our lead character, a priest of Athena, or most others. But he is forced to start thinking about it when he is tapped to be the avatar of Dionysus.
Reasonably enjoyable, and Garrett/Janifer did keep me guessing. Some sexy situations, but no details, which surely must've disappointed the thirteen-year-old boys who got their hands on it.
What encouraged me to fill out a review, though, was recently noticing "THE GODS RETURN AND CAUSE TROUBLE" plot came back a few years ago in the form of James Lovegrove's Pantheon series - "Age of Zeus", "Age of Ra", etc. Never read these; I wonder how similar "Pagan Passions" is?
3/5. Freely available on Gutenberg, with racy cover included.
The title and cover make this book look like a happier 50-shades version of a century earlier... Even though the book was without doubt controversial back then, it doesn't come anywhere near explicity.
The story is very nicely paced. The writing style is pleasant and.. funny! The characters, especially the main character, had their own set of personality traits.
The storyline was interesting and entertaining, but the genre was.. yeah, what was the genre? It started off with a typical shortstory telling style (lots of description and scenery clarification), then it was more romance and mystery and eventually a bit of scifi was the main genre. x'D Nevertheless, I enjoyed reading this story, regardless of what the genre of the story should be called like! ;)
Very silly future world where the gods have come back. In need of a substitute Dionysus, they rope lay acolyte William Forrester in as a demi-god. Being as he had been a lay acolyte of Athena, he' a little embarrassed by how well he gets into the orgy bit of being Bacchus.
Which, like, not very dirty scenes, but not "kiss and the screen goes dark" kind of stuff either. You get a nice impression of lots of enthusiastic touching before passions overwhelm into a fadeout. And! Then Forrester goes and finds a total secret the gods are hiding. Because he likes being Dionysus/Bacchus, but also has a personal sense of responsibility.
Not terrible--as pulp sci-fi/fantasy goes. The cover and title give the impression of a more explicit story than we get, but that might be just as well. It's short and there isn't so much a character development as giant leaps in the protagonist's abilities without too much delving into his psyche. And, again, I say that might be as well, because the psyche we see fluctuates between bland and bitter. Eh, it was free.
This ebook which can be found for free in multiple places is sort of a Mad Men meets the Greek Gods meets pulp SciFi. It is a relatively quick read given its short length but still drags a bit because it is a bit silly and you have to make an effort to keep reading.. Don't let the title scare you off - this is pretty mild mannered stuff. But, if you aren't a fan of old styled pulp SciFi you may want to avoid it even at the free price.
The part I did enjoy here was the idea that gods are not definite immortal beings. They can be substituted. Someone becomes an avatar of the power, essence.