The House of Hades

The House of Hades

Cover of first edition
Author Rick Riordan[1]
Cover artist John Rocco
Country United States
Series The Heroes of Olympus (bk 4)
Genre Fantasy, Greek and Roman mythology, young-adult novel
Publisher Disney-Hyperion Books[2]
Publication date
October 8, 2013 (hardcover, audiobook CD, Kindle/Nook eBook)
Media type Print (hardcover), audiobook CD, e-book
Pages 597 pp (first ed.)[2]
ISBN 978-1423146728
OCLC 843010355
LC Class PZ7.R4829 Son 2011[2]
Preceded by The Mark of Athena
Followed by The Blood of Olympus
Website www.rickriordan.com/my-books/percy-jackson/heroes-of-olympus/The-House-of-Hades.aspx

The House of Hades, the fourth novel by Rick Riordan in the Heroes of Olympus series, was released on October 8, 2013.[3]

At the conclusion of the previous book in the series, The Mark of Athena, Annabeth Chase and Percy Jackson fell into a pit leading to Tartarus. The protagonists are on a quest to close the Doors of Death, rescue Annabeth and Percy from Tartarus, and stop the Roman demigods from Camp Jupiter from attacking Camp Half-Blood.

The third-person narrators of this book are Percy Jackson, Annabeth Chase, Hazel Levesque, Leo Valdez, Frank Zhang, Jason Grace, and Piper McLean.

Plot

The five remaining demigods: Jason Grace, Piper McLean, Leo Valdez, Frank Zhang, and Hazel Levesque, accompanied by Nico di Angelo and Coach Hedge, continue to set sail towards Greece aboard the flying warship, Argo II, to search for the Doors of Death and possibly saving Percy Jackson and Annabeth Chase from Tartarus along the way. After unsuccessfully attempting to cross the Apennine Mountains due to the Ourae's hindering, Hazel leaves with her horse Arion to meet with Hecate, who offers Hazel four directions to choose. She promises the northern route that Hazel picked will work under the condition that Hazel has to practice manipulating the Mist first. Arriving at Bologna, the Argo II is raided by the Kerkopes, Passalos and Akmon, who steal Archimedes's sphere that Leo had found in Rome, among other things. Leo corners the thieves inside the Two Towers and retrieves the items alongside an agricultural book belonging to Demeter's helper, Triptolemus, and an astrolabe belonging to Odysseus but he spares the two under the condition that they head to New York to stall the impending Roman demigods from attacking Camp Half-Blood. Frank, Hazel, and Nico meet with Triptolemus at Venice, but upon discovering Nico's status as a demigod of Hades, he forces Frank to kill the katobleps of Venice by taking Hazel and Nico hostage first before he gives them barley to make cakes that will render them immune to the poison of the Necromanteion. After Frank succeeds, the Argo II heads to the direction of the Balkans, but is blocked by the bandit Sciron, who would use his giant carnivorous turtle to devour them. By manipulating the Mist, Hazel is able to make him fall into his own trap. Her father, Pluto appears to inform her that the Doors of Death are located at the lowest level of the Necromanteion in Epirus.

At Jason's behest, the demigods visit Split in order to visit the palace and tomb of Emperor Diocletian, Jason's personal hero who was the last Roman Emperor to worship the Roman gods before the Empire's adoption of Christianity. Searching for Diocletian's scepter that is said to be capable of commanding dead Roman soldiers, Jason and Nico are transported to a remote mountain by Favonius and are confronted by Cupid, who forces Nico to admit that he had a crush on Percy before leaving them the scepter. Sailing through the Adriatic Sea, the ship is barred by Khione and her siblings, who sends Leo to Ogygia before she is stopped by Piper, who had used charmspeaking on Festus to wake him. At Ogygia, Leo meets with a cynical Calypso and learns of her curse and her previous encounter with Percy. After developing a closer relationship, Calypso helps Leo escape the island, and he swears on the River Styx to return. The rest of the crew of the Argo II rest in a north African coast to meet with Notus, and Jason decides to become a part of the Greeks. The demigods rendezvous with Leo at Malta before heading to the Necromanteion. Descending through the temple's complex structure, they are separated with Leo and Hazel remaining to confront the guardians of the Door of Death: the giant Clytius and the sorceress Pasiphaë. The others are surrounded by a horde of monsters until Jason gives his praetorship to Frank, who uses Diocletian's scepter to take command of undead Roman soldiers and defeat the monsters. By manipulating the Mist, Hazel traps Pasiphaë inside an illusion, leaving only Clytius.

Meanwhile, Percy and Annabeth have to cross through the otherworldly Tartarus to find a way out. They navigate through the alien environs and face several old enemies. Annabeth uses an underworld altar to tell Rachel Elizabeth Dare to meet with Reyna and inform her to rendezvous with the demigods in Greece. Meeting up with Percy's old friend, Bob (actually the Titan Iapetus), who has been longing to see the outside world, they also befriend the outcast giant Damasen who is forced to stay in Tartarus by Gaea. Percy and Annabeth also come across a flickering skeleton cat, who Bob later names Small Bob, who says 'He is a good monster'. Near Chaos, Percy and Annabeth are double-crossed by Akhlys while attempting to receive the Death Mist to take cover, and meet with the primordial entity Nyx in her residence. They narrowly escape Nyx and her children and arrive at the heart of Tartarus, where a tall elevator functioning as the Door of Death and guarded by Titans Hyperion and Krios is located. Hyperion and Krios have let all of the fallen Giants return to the mortal world. The personification of Tartarus, angry at the Titans' badmouthing of him, takes form and swallows them up. To buy them time, Bob and Damasen sacrifice themselves to fend off Tartarus while Percy and Annabeth head upwards to the mortal world in the elevator to the Necromanteion. There, Hazel, with Hecate's aid, manages to kill Clytius.

The reunited demigods have a small picnic before continuing through Greece. Reyna also joins them, having heeded Annabeth's message and crossed the Atlantic and the Mediterranean Sea at the cost of her pegasus, Scipio, and her status as praetor possibly stripped. Annabeth says that Reyna, as a Roman, should bring the Athena Parthenos back to Camp Half-Blood to appease both the Greeks and Romans, with Nico and Hedge volunteering to accompany her. Later on, Percy looks up at the night sky and recalls Bob's final wish: "Bob says hello".

Characters

The Seven Demigods of the Great Prophecy

Additional crew of the Argo II

Other

Release

The House of Hades was published on October 9, 2013. It is available in hardcover, paperback, eBook and audiobook formats. Special edition versions were also released which were signed, and had exclusive drawings inside. Versions with the short story "The Crown of Ptolemy," a crossover with the other Rick Riordan series, The Kane Chronicles, and the short story "Percy Jackson and the Sword of Hades" printed at the back of the book were also released.

Critical reception

The Guardian commended Riordan's ability to handle the multiple perspective format smoothly and referred to his treatment of "more mature themes," specifically the revelation of Nico's sexual identity, as "subtle and effective."[4] Rick Riordan has said that Nico's sexual orientation was not planned but rather developed "the longer [he] wrote about his character" and that he included a gay hero in his books because he taught so many gay and bisexual students whom he felt deserved representation. He has stated that because his books are for middle grades, they should not and will not contain sexual content beyond "expressions of who likes whom, holding hands, and perhaps the occasional kiss" but that treating sexual identity as an adults-only topic is "absurd."[5]

The House of Hades sold over 350,000 copies during its first week, about 249,000 of them through retailers that report Nielson BookScan data. This is 26% more than The Mark of Athena during a comparable period.[6]

References

External links

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