![]() ![]() Or that Jaime will do unspeakable things with his sister but you’ll still see him as redeemable. It means I can simply relish in the story and not have to worry that Jon Snow will be knocked off. I don’t even want Rick Riordan to be like that, I like that there is a certain level of predictability in his books. He’s not trying to write something like the Game of Thrones, which is incredibly nuanced and full of grey areas. I absolutely love his books and I think he does an amazing job st handling a lot of things, including character development, diversity, and engaging plots. I don’t want it to seem like I am trying to rip into Rick Riordan’s writing. ![]() The exact thing that made her betrayal feel flat happened. And, oh yeah, I knew she’d stick around just long enough to gather some important intel that Apollo wouldn’t have otherwise. It was hard to feel like her betrayal meant a whole lot in the first book because it was just so incredibly obvious that she was going to take about 30 seconds to figure out what a shit bag her stepdad, the evil Nero, is since she’s more matuuuure now. I mean, that’s a spoiler, but I 100% called that once. In the first book, we saw Apollo being forced to serve Meg, being betrayed by her, learning about the ailing oracles and the emperors, as well as meeting an old character, Leo Valdez. Naturally, he experiences a bunch of trials and tribulations and has to find out why the oracles aren’t working and needs to defeat a bunch of evil maniacal Roman emperors risen from the dead. The Trials of Apollo: The Dark Prophecy is the second book in one of Rick Riordan’s newest series, in which the god, Apollo, is cast down to earth as a mortal teenager as punishment for his indiscretions. ![]()
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