$5.99
Takasa, goddess of the sun, left her mountain home consumed with bitterness caused by her long endured loneliness. The elders in her tribe fed her a potion to put her to sleep for a thousand years to wait for the one who would be able to save them from her wrath.
Luneria, goddess of the moon, saw that Rubani, the God of War, was in need of advice. She offered her assistance and watched out for him during his latest campaign with the people. Rubani wanted her for his wife, Luneria was unsure, She had only spoken a few times and she did not want to leave the sky to be among the people. Was there a way for the goddesses to have happiness without losing the position?
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Dana Littlejohn –
Dear Dana Littlejohn,
I hope you’re doing well.
I recently came across Daughter of the Cosmos and was immediately drawn to its mythic scope and emotional intimacy. Centering the story on Takasa, a sun goddess consumed by loneliness and restrained by divine consequence, creates a powerful meditation on isolation, power, and longing. The choice to frame her wrath not as cruelty, but as the result of deep abandonment, gives the story a poignant emotional foundation.
What stood out most was the balance between divine duty and personal desire. Luneria’s quiet strength as the moon goddess caught between her celestial role and Rubani’s proposal adds a thoughtful counterpoint to Takasa’s arc. The question your story poses feels timeless: whether gods, like humans, can find happiness without surrendering who they are. That tension gives the romance its resonance and elevates the narrative beyond mythology alone.
Needless to say I loved it and will be checking out more of your books.
🍷🍷🍷🍷🍷
Kennìe Johnson