Review: Medusa Gorgon’s Bad Hair Day

Written by Bethany Walker
Illustrated by Katie Abey
Published by Scholastic

Medusa Gorgon’s Bad Hair Day is a brilliantly funny, heart-warming adventure that completely enthralled me and brought plenty of giggles.

Twelve-year-old Medusa works for Athena, goddess of war and wisdom, as a guardian in her temple at the base of Mount Olympus, responsible for protecting her shield. Best friend Arachne advises her to write her feelings in a diary to help her deal with the anger that she has difficulty controlling when she witnesses the unfairness of the punishments meted out by the gods on the mortals. This seems to be working until Athena turns Arachne into a spider and Medusa throws her precious shield into Hades’ well. Angering the goddess of war is probably not the best idea and, as a punishment, Athena gives her the worst hair day ever: she turns her luscious locks into a writhing head of hissing snakes!

When Medusa is offered a way to get both her hair and her best friend back, she has no choice but to sign a contract with Hades and Athena which sees her step into a modern secondary school with the task of finding the shield and returning it to Athena. I mean, how difficult can it be for a girl from Ancient Greece to adapt to the 21st century? Well, it turns out its harder than you think when you mistake Alexa for an oracle, when you don’t quite know what a bra is for and when you ask for wine in the dining hall. Can Meddy keep to the terms of the contract, including not revealing who she is, keeping her temper and finding the shield – all in the space of 24 days?

What a joy this book is! I absolutely loved following Meddy as she adapts to life in a modern secondary school, finding herself in some most unfortunate situations and having lots of misunderstandings over things that modern children take for granted, which are genuinely hilarious. I don’t want to mention these for fear of spoiling readers enjoyment but giggles are definitely guaranteed. I really enjoyed the references to characters and creatures from Greek mythology – and the twists in the way they were portrayed. This is a wonderfully action-packed, hilarious read that kept me thoroughly entertained from start to finish and is one I can’t wait to recommend in our school library.

I really enjoyed the diary format interspersed with the correspondence between Athena and Hades and the running commentary of the chorus which is just brilliant and brought lots of smiles. I also really liked the different formats within the story from the diary style to letters and comic strip. The full-and-partial-page illustrations throughout are absolutely brilliant: expressive, energetic and fun, and really complementing this heart and humour in the story. I think this is an incredibly appealing format for children who I have no doubt will adore Medusa’s adventure and probably empathise with her predicaments as she navigates school life.

Many will be familiar with the curse of Medusa and her portrayal as a monster so this was a wonderfully refreshing twist that I really enjoyed. Meddy is such a likeable character and is very much her own person, who doesn’t seek popularity and who shows genuine care towards her friends.

A laugh-out-loud, up-lifting adventure, with family and friendship at its heart, perfect for readers of 9+.

Thank you to Scholastic for providing me with a copy in exchange for my honest opinion.

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