“No, buddy. I'm not going back. This is my home now."
Far from the concrete of Athens, between Karavoupoli and the Sea of Vasilias Psara, there is Anya, a beach that always has summer. And there would be many things that young Orpheus would do there if he spent the holidays with his father, the Seagull who defeated the Great Wolf. He would make mischief with the craziest friends, acquire a guardian totem, fall in love with an Elf on a full moon night, and fight with Werewolves for the sake of beautiful girls in a forgotten discotheque. He would search for Mermaids in the Harama, for ghosts in the Midday Woods, and for paths leading to the Forbidden Mountain. Or he may have just lazed by the sea all day and at night played the guitar by the fire with his company, Orestes, the Triplets and the other children.
But what a shame. Orpheus is not in Anya. He spends the summer in Athens, in the heat and in the tutoring school, without company and without vacations, while his mother is preparing to marry the most intolerable guy anyone could have for a stepfather.
But one afternoon in July, the Mad Irishman arrives, for one purpose and only: to take Orpheus and take him to distant Anya. And there, at the end of this incredible journey, the dream becomes a reality and the holidays begin in a truly unforgettable summer full of blunders, adventures and trials ready to shake everything up.
Anya. A humorous adventure of epic proportions that combines the literature of the fantastic with the Greek summer and youth holidays. An anthem about friendship, freedom, fantasy, nostalgia, teenage madness and summer flirtations.
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