Book Review: Rick Riordan’s The Dark Prophecy
That gawky, acne-covered sixteen-year-old? Lester? Yeah, that’s Apollo being punished, and he must restore Oracles that have gone dark. Without his powers.
That gawky, acne-covered sixteen-year-old? Lester? Yeah, that’s Apollo being punished, and he must restore Oracles that have gone dark. Without his powers.
Now Magnus and his crew must sail to the farthest borders of Jotunheim and Niflheim in pursuit of Asgard’s greatest threat and prevent Ragnarok.
Thor’s hammer has fallen into enemy hands, and if Magnus Chase and his friends can’t retrieve the hammer quickly, the giants will invade and Ragnarok will begin.
The past years of hardship taught Magnus well, and when he learns that impossible secret and his role in saving the world, he steps up to wield the sword…until he dies.
It’s Apollo’s attitude that gets him into trouble, and Zeus punishes him yet again, tearing away his godhood. Leaving him powerless until he fulfills the trials set before him.
A handful of young demigods must stop Gaea’s army of giants before the Feast of Spes when Gaea plans to sacrifice two demigods. She needs the blood of Olympus in order to wake.
Annabeth and Percy must survive the Underworld while their friends find the mortal side of those Doors of Death, then seal the Doors on both sides, trapping Annabeth and Percy inside.
The chaos snake, Apophis, is back, threatening the world with eternal darkness. The Kanes must find an ancient spell to turn the serpent’s shadow into a weapon.
Climb aboard the Argo II, if you dare for an unforgettable journey across land and sea to Rome, where important discoveries, surprising sacrifices, and unspeakable horrors await.
His memories lost, Percy stumbles into the Roman camp, introducing new demigods, more fearsome monsters and other creatures, all destined to play a part in the Prophesy of Seven.