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.
With this string of deaths, Moira Moriarty finds it hard to figure out why her brother, James, has turned so bad, especially since her friend, Sherlock Holmes, was expelled.
In the future families are limited to only two children, so Luke has lived his 12 years in fear, until another convinces him that the government is wrong.
A vigilante group enables four murderers to escape, but it all goes wrong. It’s up to Walter Day and the rest of the Murder Squad to hunt them down, including Jack the Ripper.
With Captain Williams and Rachel her only allies, Bess must not put them at risk as she tries to find answers. But there is a murderer here who is driven to kill again and again.
New evidence arises pointing to the innocence of a black man lynched thirty-six years ago, and Sheriff Quinn Colson is determined to dig out the truth from all the lies.
No one must know that Serafina exists, when children at the estate start disappearing, only Serafina knows who the culprit is, and she must risk forces with Braeden Vanderbilt.
Away in a manger, asleep on the hay, Meg Langslow finds a little gift with a note implicating her brother Rob. His fiancée is not amused, and Meg must uncover the truth.
Desperate on two fronts, the USS Walker out of commission means Commander Matt Reddy must use a different ship to save the men of the Santa Catalina and block the Grik’s Final Swarm.
Betrayal is inevitable, but Kate has no choice, if she wants to protect her son, Curran, Atlanta from an ancient enemy. She may not survive the coming battle. But she has to try.