Apollo is the true comic relief, but the other gods who make appearances are all just as hopeless and vindictive, really. They're perfect for a piss-
take, and in Gods Behaving Badly Phillips has done a marvellous job of sending them up - all while making you like them just a little bit. Artemis,
goddess of hunting and celibacy, has a job as a dog-walker. On the other hand no one would debate whether one could starve a child to death
because there leader had a prostitute. This was not a particularly well written book. One could add many more points, but even leaving it at that
for the sake of reasonable brevity, and for the previous reasons, I would say that just as one ought to reject the claims that a morally good let alone
morally perfect creator engaged in the attack on the Egyptians described in Exodus, ordered the genocide of the Canaanites and the Amalekites as
described in Deuteronomy and Samuel 2 respectively, or approved of the behavior of Elisha in the case of the bears, one ought to reject the claim
that a morally good let alone morally perfect creator is gave the commands I described earlier, and many others in Mosaic Law. Gods Behaving
Badly by Marie Phillips. They live in a run-down London townhouse, and shy Alice is the unfortunate mortal they hire to clean the place. From the
Hardcover edition. Notify me of new comments via email. Enchanted, he whisks her deep into his dark realm. If you, too, cannot only name
several of the Greek gods and goddesses but also have a personal favorite, you absolutely must read Gods Behaving Badly. And they've had to
get day jobs: Lamb also discusses how Yahweh is slow to anger and abounding in steadfast love not only towards the Israelites, but also other
nations. For instance, in Exodus I wish I'd been able to say that same about "Gods Behaving Badly". Stephanie Spinner brings the famous
messengerand the best-known gods and mortals of mythologyto life with high action and spare, powerful prose. Seemingly only Ares god of
war and Hermes god of money and responsible for conducting souls to the underworld, among other tasks are kept busy with their actual divine
duties. And, frankly, nobody cares. Aug 19, David rated it liked it Shelves: They only exist in your head, after all yes, so speaks the resident atheist
here. View all 19 comments. Zeus spends most of This story reads like the novelization of a comic book. I'm sure the author knows he was much
more complex and used this simplified Dionysos as a means for her novel. Jun 06, Amanda rated it liked it Recommends it for: It is a complex
library of them. You seem to have choosen an analogy where the crime in question is significantly less serious and that obviously effects the intuitive
judgments people make regarding the case. The reoccurring question is effectively answered. This reviewer also appreciated this statement Lamb
makes regarding genealogies in the Bible: Lamb, God Behaving Badly: Jan 20, Stuart rated it really liked it. Love for people can also lead to anger
about injustice. In about pages, Lamb treats these topics in a well-informed, accessible, and humorous way. Part of teaching is un-teaching: On the
definite positive side, this work of fiction actually helped me quite a bit with remembering who was who in the world of Greek Mythology, which is
something I've currently been struggling with. She is a fabulous narrator and really adds a lot to the story - so much so that I probably would have
returned this audio book after the first 20 "he saids" if it weren't for her. This brings us to the real problem with the passage: Then one day, Hades-
-the dreaded lord of the dead--sees Persephone. Yet, even if some of the people being punished did something immoral, it does not seem to me
that they were on average any worse than those hostile teenagers might have been. The man who has sinned is the man who must die and a son is
not to suffer for the sins of his father? Oh, for the record, my favorite of the gods has always been Hermes. He points out rightly that people who
line up on either side of these issues tend to ignore the texts on the other side. Regardless, if for whatever reason you dislike the argument that
contains prostitutes, we may assume that historians got it wrong and Kim never had sex with any prostitute, and Kim was punished for his
tyrannical rule.