
Title: The Titan's Curse
Author: Rick Riordan
Genre: Mythological Fantasy
Age Range: 10+
TV Guide Snippet: Good Ol' Percy Jackson is back at it on the next (stolen) quest to find a missing goddess, defeat Cronus' AGAIN, and save Olympus.
Plot Summary: Percy, Annabeth, and the recovered Thalia are on a mission to help Grover snatch two more half-bloods, Bianca and Nico di Angelo. But as usual, things go sideways as a Frenchy manticore (a half lion, scorpion, humanoid monster) who names himself Dr. Thorn tries to kill or steal them away to Cronus' side. If not for the huntress goddess Artemis and her arrow launching band of prepubescent boy hating girls, they would have been pushed straight off the cliff. But alas, Percy and his friends are able to fight another day. Except Annabeth, she fell off the side of the cliff daggers deep clinging to the manticore. Artemis orders the hunters to Camp Half-Blood so that she can go off and find a beast that could destroy Olympus.
Now with the hunters in Camp Half-Blood, there is a new prophecy that has been prophesied and propho-said that requires a break in the on going feud between hunters and half-bloods to go save Artemis from whatever has captured her. But, it is decided that the heroes going don't include Percy. In his very Percy way, he goes anyway and ends up being the fifth team member that they need on their journey out to foil the Titan's Curse and save Olympus from the mysterious beast that will cause its ULTIMATE DESTRUCTION!
Now with the hunters in Camp Half-Blood, there is a new prophecy that has been prophesied and propho-said that requires a break in the on going feud between hunters and half-bloods to go save Artemis from whatever has captured her. But, it is decided that the heroes going don't include Percy. In his very Percy way, he goes anyway and ends up being the fifth team member that they need on their journey out to foil the Titan's Curse and save Olympus from the mysterious beast that will cause its ULTIMATE DESTRUCTION!
Anything Critical: Reading a Percy Jackson book is like slipping on your favorite pair of shoes. They are proportioned just right, comfortable, and make you feel good. There was some growth in this book I wasn't expecting. Much how the the third Harry Potter book takes an emotional turn, I think that this third Percy Jackson book makes headway in a different direction. Early on, Percy swears to do his best to protect a member of the quest, but he fails. Later on, Percy is held responsible. A promise is a promise, and he is held to his word. I think this is the first time that Percy is faced with the idea that if he fails some people may die. And when people die, grudges are held. That principle explains god and half-blood life in a nutshell. You succeed, someone hates you. You fail someone, their kin is out for revenge.
Satisfaction Level: 95%
Curriculum Ties: Mythology
Challenge Issues: Death, Magic, Religion
Program Ideas: Having the Percy Jackson movies is a 50/50. Some kids like the books better and harbor resentment. What might be cooler is a shield making program. Thalia has this rad Medusa head shield called Aegis. Kids could make their own shields, with or without the Medusa head, while talking about the quests they'd like to go on.
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