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 a hard-to-please boss breathing down his neck and a personal life badly in need of relationship advice, Bernie prefers a gentle approach when fixing broken universes.
The fate of the world is down to a PITA Crow girl, Erin Amsel, who must retrieve a giant’s sword by going where no Crow dares. And Stieg Engstrom is just the Raven to help her.
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.
Max Sumner and his three best friends, Harley, Ernie, and Natalia, find themselves caught up in the quest to save their town when the creatures from their card game come to life.
Only Mist, a Valkyrie, survived the last battle centuries ago. But now the trickster god Loki has reappeared with big plans for Earth, and it’s up to Mist to stop him.
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.
Mist has been the guardian of Odin’s spear, Gungnir, for centuries, but she believes the gods are dead and intends to throw it into the Bay. Until she rescues a woman from jumping.
It could turn into war between the Olympians and Anderson’s people. And as the complications mount up, Nikki Glass begins to question whether Konstantin is behind those attacks?
The only warrior who can stop a magical terrorist is following his own path, driven by the force of love, and for Quinn’s love, Alaric might drown the entire world.