Haven't posted here since page 2. Huh.
So for my birthday a while back, a good friend got me an exceptional present. As in, I'm
incredibly nerdy, right? So even good friends would struggle picking up something that wasn't tech-related or otherwise novelty-themed, and I completely get it. But he got me
Mythos, by Stephen Fry (go figure it has its own Wiki page

). Which means at some point he picked up I was into Greek (and other) myths, as well as being a fan of Fry (the latter was easy to pick up on to be honest, haha, or easily just a good guess). But I was touched at the thought that obviously went into it.
Despite that, I struggle with reading these days, and even Mythos is no exception. So I've been grabbing a few pages here and there whenever I can, and I'm slowly working through it. Just over a third of the way through and I have to say, probably redundantly, but Fry is a great writer. Or at the very least, he writes as well as he speaks. The footnotes are a delight, his modern way of phrasing the various acts of Greek deities is often hilarious, and it's really just a good read. It's also a fun language primer for etymology, and a surprise at just how many things we've brought through from Ancient Greek (and / or Latin, and the overlap with the Roman pantheon of the time) to the modern day.
A great read, and I figure that rating will last all the way through to the end of the book.