McCaughrean’s involvement is the book’s secret weapon. Her prose is neither the dry, archaic language of a 19th-century translation nor the overly simplified, "babyish" language of a picture book. She finds a golden mean: lyrical, rhythmic, and vivid, yet perfectly accessible to a modern teenager. She understands that the myths are, at their core, thrilling narratives about love, jealousy, ambition, and revenge. Her retelling of the story of Perseus is breathless and cinematic; her version of the tragedy of Orpheus and Eurydice is genuinely heartbreaking.
As part of the "New Windmills KS3" collection, it is designed for classroom use to introduce pupils to foundational literature, character, and cultural heritage. the new windmill book of greek myths