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I'm not going to do that, they are long books and not very good. If you think a deity does actually fit him then say what one.
As I said before, mixing archetypes is a cop out, if it has to be mixed it's not an archetype and you are just picking and choosing things to make up a new character.
Hera does not match.
> You see those chicks on youtube doing hunting or riding speedbikes or whatever boyish crap? Now they are Pallas Athene, The Daddy's Daughter, born from The Daddy's mind. For example.
That's a fairly reductionist and flawed view of things. Firstly, not all speed bike or hunting girls are daddies girls nor do all daddies girls ride speed bikes and hunt. But secondly, this treats dirt bike riding and hunting the same as war and strategy when they are not, there does also happen to be a goddess of hunting by the way. And thirdly, Athena is not boyish, she is vain as mentioned before but also has the feminine modesty of a girl as seen when she blinds the son of her companion when he sees her bathing. She is not a tomboy.
She also does not share much in common with Zeus, she is not of his mind and does not act as he does. I mean really, how many girls does Athena rape? How many wives does she have? Saying that she is of his mind is reading far too much into her birth story.
Hera does not want to be the only woman in her husbands life, she just wants her husband to stop cheating and blames other women for that. She is not a step mother, she is a wife with a disloyal husband. She has female children that live with her and she does not take action against many of the non related women that are prevalent in the cosmos and even that are the daughters of Zeus in some cases, such as Athena. She does not take action against Athena because Athena is not sleeping with her husband or the product of another woman sleeping with her husband, though in one version of the story he is mad as Zeus for giving birth by himself, but she is mad at Zeus, she does not take it out on Athena.
These gods and goddess simply don't fit into the simplistic archetypes that you and the authors of those books try to make them fit into.