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Paperback Sun Gods: Ten Mythologies of the Morning Book

ISBN: B0H1GW2D66

ISBN13: 9798195935139

Sun Gods: Ten Mythologies of the Morning

Every culture that has ever existed has worshipped the sun.

Not one human society, in the long record of our species, failed to raise its face toward the morning and acknowledge the bright thing that warmed it. Some named the sun. Some made the sun a god. Almost all of them, when they began to tell stories about it, told the same story: a story about something the sun must overcome.

This book is about ten of those stories.

Ten cultures. Ten suns. Ten radically different answers to the same impossible question: what is that bright thing in the sky, and what must be done to make sure it comes back tomorrow?

Inside, you will meet: Amaterasu, the Japanese goddess who hid in a cave and was lured out by laughter and a mirrorHuitzilopochtli, the Aztec hummingbird god born fully armed for the defense of his motherRa, the Egyptian sun who travels through the twelve hours of the night and embraces his own corpse at dawnApollo, the Greek god of clarity, music, and prophecy who killed the python at DelphiInti, the Inca father whose temple at Cusco was lined with sheets of beaten goldSurya, the Vedic sun who allowed himself to be ground down on a cosmic lathe for the love of his wifeS l, the Norse goddess fleeing across the heavens from a wolf who will eventually catch herSol Invictus, the unconquered Roman sun whose feast on the twenty-fifth of December was quietly absorbed into ChristmasDazhbog, the Slavic grandfather god whose Ukrainian descendants still called themselves his grandsonsLiza, the West African sun who cannot be spoken of without his twin Mawu - a religion still practiced today in Benin, Haiti, and Brazil

Each chapter introduces the deity, retells the central legend in full with dialogue drawn from the spirit of the surviving texts, and traces what survives today: the temples that still stand, the festivals that are still celebrated, the holidays we keep without quite remembering why.

The Mexica had no contact with the Norse. The Fon had no contact with the Japanese. The Inca had no contact with the Egyptians. And yet, when the stories are laid side by side, a pattern emerges that no one of them, by itself, could have shown.

Grounded in primary sources from the Egyptian Book of the Dead to the Kojiki, from the Rig Veda to the Poetic Edda, from the Florentine Codex of Sahag n to the field recordings of twentieth-century West Africa, this is comparative mythology written for the reader who wants the pleasure of a story before the apparatus of a footnote.

The perfect companion for: Travelers heading to Spain, Iceland, or Portugal for the August 2026 total solar eclipse - Europe's first in over a quarter century - and the August 2027 eclipse across southern Spain and North AfricaReaders of world mythology, comparative religion, and ancient historyAnyone who has ever stepped outside in the morning and wondered why every culture, on every continent, in every century, looked at the sun and decided it deserved a story

Good morning.

Recommended

Format: Paperback

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