No Mans Sky Upload Artemis or Let Him Die

2007 book past Rick Riordan

The Titan's Curse
The titan's curse.jpg

The front cover of the first U.Southward. edition.

Author Rick Riordan
Embrace artist John Rocco
Land United States
Serial Percy Jackson & the Olympians (book 3)
Genre Fantasy, Greek mythology, young-adult novel
Publisher Miramax Books/Hyperion Books for Children[i]

Publication date

May 1, 2007[2] [3]
Media blazon Print (hardcover), audiobook
Pages 312[1]
ISBN 978-ane-4231-0145-1
OCLC 76863948
LC Grade PZ7.R4829 Tit 2007[1]
Preceded past The Body of water of Monsters
Followed by The Battle of the Labyrinth

The Titan's Curse is an American fantasy-adventure novel based on Greek mythology written past Rick Riordan. It was released on May i, 2007, and is the third novel in the Percy Jackson & the Olympians series and the sequel to The Sea of Monsters. It is about the adventures of the 14-year-sometime demigod Percy Jackson as he and his friends go on a dangerous quest to rescue his 14-twelvemonth-old demigod friend Annabeth Chase and the Greek goddess Artemis, who take both been kidnapped past the titans.

The Titan's Curse was published past Miramax Books, an banner of Hyperion Books for Children[one] and thus Disney Publishing (succeeded by the Disney Hyperion banner). It was released in the U.s.a. and the United Kingdom on May ane, 2007.[2] The novel was also released in audiobook format, read past Jesse Bernstein.[four] [5]

Mostly well-received, The Titan's Curse was nominated for numerous awards, winning ones such every bit the No. one The New York Times children's series all-time seller[half dozen] [7] and Volume Sense Top xxx Summer Choice for 2010.[8]

Plot [edit]

Percy Jackson, Annabeth Chase, and Thalia Grace infiltrate the West Hall boarding school in Bar Harbor, Maine, to escort the siblings, Bianca and Nico di Angelo, to Campsite Half-Blood. Though their extraction is a success, the manticore Dr. Thorn captures Annabeth, escaping when Artemis and her Hunters get in. Artemis sets off alone to track down a monster which, in the incorrect easily, has the power to destroy Mount Olympus. Beforehand, she sends the half-bloods and her Hunters to Camp Half-Claret, via her brother Apollo and his sun chariot. Bianca joins the Hunters, granting her immortality.

At campsite, Percy and his pegasus Blackjack rescue an Ophiotaurus which Percy nicknames "Bessie". Artemis' lieutenant Zoë Nightshade begins to accept dreams of the goddess in danger, whilst Percy dreams of Annabeth saving Luke Castellan by holding up a cave's ceiling. The mummified Oracle of Delphi disrupts a capture the flag game to give Zoë a prophecy; instructing her to travel to Mountain Tamalpais, the modernistic day location of the Titans' domain of Mountain Othrys, to rescue Artemis and Annabeth. Zoë takes Thalia, Bianca, and Grover Underwood with her on the quest. Percy decides to sneak off on his own, reluctantly promising Nico that he will protect Bianca.

Travelling to Washington D.C., Percy follows Thorn to the Smithsonian, witnessing Luke, Thorn, and a man called "The General" summoning spartoi to waylay Zoë's grouping. Percy warns his friends, helping them defeat the Nemean lion, claiming its impenetrable pelt as a advantage. Zoë allows Percy to bring together the group, realising her prophecy implied this. They travel to Cloudcroft, New Mexico, where Grover senses the missing god Pan, who sends the Erymanthian Boar to help the group escape the spartoi.

They attain Gila Claw, Arizona, the "Junkyard of the Gods". Bianca reveals she and Nico unknowingly spent years in the Lotus Hotel, really born in the 1930s, until taken to West Hall. Percy briefly has an encounter with Ares and Aphrodite, who warn him not to take anything from the junkyard. Bianca, regretting her choice to leave Nico, tries to take a figurine from the junkyard for her brother, enkindling a prototype of Talos, giving her life to destroy it. The survivors sullenly travel to Hoover Dam, where Percy encounters Bessie, likewise as Rachel Elizabeth Dare, a mortal who can meet through the Mist, providing him an escape route by distracting the spartoi. The group wing to San Francisco with aid from the dam'southward Winged Figures of the Commonwealth.

Percy seeks out Nereus, learning that Bessie is the monster Artemis was hunting. After destroying Thorn, Percy sends Grover back to Army camp Half-Blood with Bessie, sacrificing the panthera leo pelt to his father Poseidon for his friend's safe passage. Percy, Zoë, and Thalia turn to Annabeth'southward male parent Frederick Hunt for help, borrowing his machine to reach Mountain Othrys. At that place, they enter the Garden of the Hesperides, where Zoë is revealed to be the daughter of Atlas, the General's true identity. Zoë was exiled by her siblings after aiding Hercules steal a golden apple tree as per his labours, having gifted him with Percy'due south sword Riptide.

Reaching the peak of Mountain Othrys, the grouping find Artemis holding upwards the sky, a function that Annabeth was besides subjected too, explaining the true nature of Percy'southward dreams. Percy briefly takes the heaven's weight, freeing Artemis. Luke tempts Thalia into joining Kronos' forces, but she declines, knocking him off the mountainside. Percy and Artemis trap Atlas beneath the sky, just not before he casts Zoë off a cliff, mortally wounding her. Frederick flies to the rescue, piloting a Sopwith Camel, the half-bloods escaping to a nearby airfield where Zoë dies of her wounds, transformed into a new constellation past Artemis called the "Hunter".

Percy, Annabeth, Thalia, and Artemis travel to Mount Olympus to attend the gods' winter solstice meeting, Artemis convincing the Olympians of the Titans' threat. Bessie is kept on Olympus for safekeeping. Thalia joins the Hunters to forestall the Corking Prophecy, in which a child of either Zeus, Poseidon, or Hades could be used to bring victory for Kronos. Percy learns from Poseidon that Luke is alive. Upon returning to Camp One-half-Blood, Percy informs Nico of Bianca's demise. A distraught Nico blames Percy, revealing he is a son of Hades when he banishes the spartoi to the Underworld, before fleeing. Percy tells Annabeth and Grover of Nico's lineage, the trio promising to keep it a surreptitious, fearful that Nico will be the subject of the Great Prophecy.

Characters [edit]

  • Percy Jackson: Percy, a 14-twelvemonth-former demigod and son of Poseidon, is the protagonist as well as the serial' narrator. He embarks on a journey to save Annabeth and the Greek goddess Artemis, who have both been kidnapped.
  • Thalia Grace: Thalia is a xv-yr-erstwhile demigod daughter of Zeus. Though she appears in Percy'due south dream in the start book, she makes a full advent at the end of The Sea of Monsters and is given a greater office in the third book. Thalia is described as looking very punk, with electrical blueish eyes, black clothes, and spiky hair. Her personality is often described as "independent and many times sarcastic." While Thalia is a lot like Percy (due to both being children of the Big Three), and they become proficient friends earlier the events of the volume, they often argue. She is heartbroken by Luke's betrayal of the camp and gods, every bit information technology is implied that she had feelings for him. She is also afraid of heights, which she reluctantly admits to Percy, despite the fact that she is the daughter of Zeus, God of the Sky. She joins the Huntress of Artemis as the new lieutenant to prevent her from beingness the kid of the Not bad Prophecy with the permission of her begetter.
  • Annabeth Hunt: Annabeth is a 14-year-quondam demigod and the daughter of Athena. She is friends with Percy, Thalia, and Grover. She is kidnapped, along with Artemis, past the Titans. She has a bang-up passion and involvement in architecture, and wishes to be an builder when she is older. Although she has a growing love involvement in Percy, her feelings for Luke remain a trouble between the two. Percy returns her feelings without realizing information technology, and is oblivious to how she feels about him.
  • Grover Underwood: A large-hearted satyr whose favorite foods are aluminum cans and cheese enchiladas. He is 28 years old, yet has the appearance of a teenager due to the satyrs' slower growth rate (half that of humans). He wants to get a searcher for Pan, the satyr god of nature and the wild, who vicious into a "deep sleep" due to humans' pollution of the world.
  • Bianca di Angelo: Bianca is a 12-twelvemonth-former demigod and the daughter of Hades. She and her ten-year-old brother Nico were trapped in the Lotus Casino, where fourth dimension is slowed down, but at the beginning of the book, they got out and she attended an army school in Bar Harbor, Maine. She is killed past an automaton during the quest in the "Junkyard of the Gods".
  • Zoë Nightshade: Zoë is the daughter of Atlas, a banished Hesperid for helping the hero Hercules, the starting time lieutenant of the Hunters of Artemis, and the maker of Percy's sword, Riptide. Due to her age, she often has trouble updating her language and speaking skills, and uses Heart English. She dies subsequently being bitten by Ladon the dragon, who protects the immortality-giving gold apple tree, and later on her begetter Atlas throws her against a pile of rocks. Artemis turns her spirit into a constellation soon after her expiry. She and Thalia developed grudges confronting each other after Thalia refused to join the hunters earlier the events of the series, only they get eventually become along before Zoë's demise.
  • Luke Castellan: The 21-yr-old demigod son of Hermes, Luke is the master adversary of the series. He is the main crony to Kronos; Kronos' followers and army gather on a transport called the Princess Andromeda. He is idea expressionless when Thalia kicks him off Mountain Tamalpais, but it is later revealed to have survived.
  • Nico di Angelo: The 10-yr-old demigod son of Hades, he and his older sister, Bianca, are rescued from a manticore past Percy, Annabeth, Thalia, and Grover. He is left at army camp during the quest due to his young age, merely stays in the Hermes cabin because his parentage has not yet been discovered. He leaves camp after hearing Percy broke his promise to him and letting Bianca dice. Before he leaves, he sends an ground forces of skeletal warriors dorsum to the underworld, revealing his parentage.

Disquisitional reception [edit]

The Titan'south Expletive received relatively positive reviews, which often lauded the sense of humor and action in the story. Children's Literature, which commended the book's fast pace and sense of humour, wrote, "Readers will relate to expert natured Percy, the protagonist."[9] Kirkus Reviews awarded information technology a starred review with, "This third in the Olympians series makes the Greek myths come alive in a way no dreary classroom unit tin ... will take readers wondering how literature can be this fun. This can stand up alone, though newcomers to the series volition race dorsum to the first ii volumes and eagerly await a fourth installment."[3] School Library Journal praised the "adventurous" plot besides as the book'due south appeal: "Teachers will cheer for Percy Jackson and the Olympians every bit they inspire students to embrace Greek mythology and score the ultimate Herculean challenge: getting kids to read. All in all, a winner of Olympic proportions and a surefire read-aloud."[10] Booklist'southward starred review approved of the novel'south humor, action, and plotting: "The Percy Jackson & the Olympians series is built effectually a terrific idea—that the half-mortal offspring of Greek gods live among us, playing out struggles of mythic scale—and Riordan takes it from forcefulness to strength with this heady installment, adding fifty-fifty more than depth to the characters and story arc while retaining its predecessors' nonstop laughs and action."[x] Kidsreads raved, "Rick Riordan'southward Olympian adventures have gained peachy popularity thanks to their combination of humour, adventure and a winning hero ... Readers who are familiar with aboriginal mythology will enjoy Riordan's tongue-in-cheek approach; those who aren't just might be tempted to get to the original sources to learn more."[11]

Awards and nominations [edit]

The Titan's Curse received several literature-related awards, including: number one The New York Times children's series all-time seller[6] [7] and Volume Sense Top Ten Summer Option for 2007.[8] It was besides a Quill Laurels nominee.[12]

Audiobook [edit]

An 8-hr-and-forty-viii-minute audiobook[thirteen] read by the actor Jesse Bernstein[14] and published by Listening Library[fifteen] was released on April 24, 2007.[iv] [16] [17]

AudioFile Mag lauded Bernstein'due south interpretation, writing, "Sounding alternately immature, or onetime, or really scary, Jesse Bernstein ... finer voices the confusion and loss the team experiences."[fourteen]

Sequel [edit]

In The Battle of the Labyrinth, Annabeth and Percy find an entrance into the Labyrinth during a game of capture the flag. Percy soon learns that Luke had used the entrance and will pb his army through the Labyrinth directly in to the heart of camp. To become into the Labyrinth, Percy has to find the symbol of Daedalus, the Greek letter delta, (Δ) on a passageway, bear on it, and then enter the Labyrinth. Using the Labyrinth, Percy tries to find Daedalus so Luke cannot get Ariadne'south string, thereby foiling Luke'due south invasion.[xviii]

Run into also [edit]

  • Mythology
  • Greek gods

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "The Titan's curse" (get-go edition). LC Online Catalog. Library of Congress (lccn.loc.gov). Retrieved 2015-11-05.
  2. ^ a b "The Titan's Expletive". Rick Riordan. Archived from the original on May 8, 2008. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  3. ^ a b "The Titan'due south Curse". Kirkus Reviews. April one, 2007. Retrieved January 16, 2011. Starred review.
  4. ^ a b "The Titan'south Curse". Random House . Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  5. ^ Riordan, Rick (May 2007). The Titan's Curse (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 3) (Hardcover). ISBN978-1423101451.
  6. ^ a b Thomas, Mike W. (June 1, 2007). "Local writer'south fantasy fiction has made him a all-time seller". San Antonio Business Journal. Retrieved January 18, 2010.
  7. ^ a b Bass, Deborah (May 5, 2009). "Hugely Anticipated Finale to Blockbuster Percy Jackson & the Olympians Series Goes on Sale Today". Disney Book Group. Retrieved January 18, 2010.
  8. ^ a b "The Summertime 2007 Children'due south Book Sense Picks". American Booksellers Association. Retrieved January 18, 2010.
  9. ^ "The Titan's Expletive: Barnes & Noble". Barnes and Noble. Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  10. ^ a b "The Titan'south Curse". Amazon.com . Retrieved April 12, 2009.
  11. ^ Piehl, Norah. "The Titan's Expletive: Percy Jackson & the Olympians, Volume Three". KidsReads. Retrieved Nov 12, 2009.
  12. ^ "The 2007 Quill Award Nominees Are..." New York: WNBC. July 5, 2007. Archived from the original on February xx, 2008. Retrieved January 23, 2010.
  13. ^ "The Titan's Curse: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 3 (Unabridged)". audible.com . Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  14. ^ a b "THE TITAN'S Expletive: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Volume three". AudioFile. September 2009. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  15. ^ "The Titan's Curse: Percy Jackson and the Olympians: Book 3". booksontape.com. Retrieved November 12, 2009.
  16. ^ The Titan'south Curse (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Book 3) [AUDIOBOOK] [Unabridged] (Audio CD). ISBN0739350331.
  17. ^ "The Titan'south Curse Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series, Book iii". Listen Upwards! Vermont. Retrieved January sixteen, 2010.
  18. ^ Riordan, Rick (May 8, 2008). The Boxing of the Labyrinth. Percy Jackson & the Olympians. Hyperion Books for Children. ISBN978-1-4231-0146-viii. OCLC 180753884.

External links [edit]

  • Rick Riordan Myth Master at publisher Penguin Books (UK)
  • Percy Jackson & the Olympians at publisher Disney-Hyperion Books (United states)
  • Rick Riordan at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Titan%27s_Curse

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