A very interesting book, yet dense, book comprising a series of old celtic tales that describe the victorious and tragic lives of many mythic heroes.
Although I was expecting to learn, in a systematic and detailed manner, about celtic mythology - origin, the backstory of the gods and goddesses and their descendants - I was presented with light tales, one of which I had the opportunity to read aloud with my girlfriend, taking on the roles of the characters, which was a fun way of passing time. The fantastic elements of each tale, whether they are the superhuman powers of some warriors, the magic used to cast curses and spells, or the almost immortality of the mythology characters carried me to a different reality, and to me childhood imagination, in a way.
One detail I find interesting is that these tales don't "age well", considering that each of them depicts women, more precisely princesses, queens or daughters of men with great status, as an object of beauty and envy or prizes to be won, with no will and thoughts of their own. From an historical and carefree perspective, these roles portrayed by women are suited to the time period, but, luckily there is a clear evolution around the roles women play in our society - still the beauty benchmark, but also the symbol of resilience, hard-work and most important, of freedom.