The Mark of Athena

The Mark of Athena

Cover of first edition
Author Rick Riordan
Cover artist John Rocco
Country United States
Series The Heroes of Olympus (bk 3)
Genre Fantasy, Greek and Roman mythology, young-adult novel
Publisher Disney-Hyperion Books[1]
Publication date
October 2, 2012
Media type Print (hardcover), audiobook, e-book
Pages 586 pp (first ed.)[1]
ISBN 978-1423140603
OCLC 785897707
LC Class PZ7.R4829 Mar 2012[1]
Preceded by The Son of Neptune
Followed by The House of Hades

The Mark of Athena is the third book of The Heroes of Olympus series by Rick Riordan, released on October 2, 2012. It is the direct sequel of The Son of Neptune. The Mark of Athena follows the stories of the Greek demigods: Annabeth Chase, Leo Valdez, Piper McLean, and Percy Jackson; and the Roman demigods Jason Grace, Hazel Levesque, and Frank Zhang. It is the first novel told from the perspective each of the seven demigods mentioned in the second Great Prophecy.

Development and promotion

Rick Riordan had been working on The Mark of Athena since the completion of The Son of Neptune.[2]

During his tour to promote the last of The Kane Chronicles books, titled The Serpent's Shadow, Riordan read part of the first chapter of The Mark of Athena. The cover and full first chapter were also released Disney's The Heroes of Olympus website.[3] On September 27, 2012, Riordan confirmed that there would be a first US printing of 3.5 million copies.

Plot

Six months after the events of The Lost Hero, Leo Valdez has constructed a trireme, Argo II for use in the seven demigods' journey to Greece to stop Gaea from awakening. He, Jason Grace, Piper McLean, and Annabeth Chase, accompanied by Coach Hedge, arrive at Camp Jupiter to rendezvous with Percy Jackson and the Roman demigods. At Percy's request, Frank Zhang and Hazel Levesque are chosen as representatives of the Romans, alongside Jason, to accompany the Greek demigods. Annabeth, while having a talk with Camp Jupiter's praetor, Reyna, about the quest, reveals that in order to unite the Greek and Roman demigods against Gaea, they have to first retrieve the Athena Parthenos, a giant statue of Athena that was stolen by the Romans in ancient times and hidden somewhere in Rome. The statue can only be retrieved by the demigods of Athena through the help of the Mark of Athena, all of whom had died trying. However, an Eidolon sent by Gaea possesses Leo and forces him to fire a blast on the camp, inciting the paranoid augur, Octavian, to convince the Romans that the Greeks are a threat and have to be destroyed.[4]

The seven demigods escape from Camp Jupiter and briefly land near the Great Salt Lake to search for celestial bronze, which they steal from a resurrected Narcissus. During the search, Leo meets with Nemesis, who presents him with a fortune cookie that would help him later, but with consequences. Percy, Jason, and Piper meet with Bacchus at Kansas after hearing about his canceled appointment with Ceres. With Gaea's directing, two Eidolons possess Percy and Jason, and later Leo, but both times they are repelled. Percy, Frank, and Hedge also face Phorcys and his wife, Keto at the Georgia Aquarium while searching for information about Gaea's plans, with the latter sending one of her children, a giant Scolopendra, after them. Throughout the journey, tensions arise between the demigods, mostly between Leo and Frank, the latter of whom constantly becomes the target of jokes and teases by the former and is jealous of the former's friendship with his girlfriend, Hazel, when he learns that Hazel's previous boyfriend is Leo's identical great-grandfather. Hazel is also upset with Jason and Leo because the two are hesitant in saving her half-brother, Nico di Angelo, who has been captured by the Giants during his travel to find the Doors of Death. While searching for the Mark of Athena at Fort Sumter in Charleston, the demigods are ambushed by the Romans, but Reyna decides to let Annabeth continue her search for the Athena Parthenos, reminding that their next encounter will no longer be easy.

While crossing the Atlantic Ocean, Leo, Frank, and Hazel are sent underwater when the Argo II is attacked by the Scolopendra, in the process learning about the existence of Camp Fish-Blood, a hero-training camp for ichthyocentaurs. The demigods resume the travel after regrouping and arrive at Europe. After managing to get around from Hercules at the Strait of Gibraltar, they sail through the Mediterranean Sea, confronting Chrysaor along the way, and finally reach Rome. There, the group split up, with Hedge defending the ship, Percy, Jason, and Piper scouting the Colosseum, Frank, Hazel, and Leo searching for Nico, and Annabeth finding the Athena Parthenos. Percy and Jason are confronted by Ephialtes and Otis, the twin Giants who capture Nico, and have to incapacitate them a few times before Bacchus arrives to finish them off and claim the victory. Frank, Hazel, and Leo are trapped by the Eidolons underground and Leo decides to use his fortune cookie, which suggests him to make use of the Archimedes Ball found there to bail them out and seal the Eidolons for good. Annabeth, meanwhile, has to cross a variety of challenges designed to trap the demigods of Athena, eventually confronting Arachne, the last guardian of the statue and a seamstress who was turned by Athena to a spider for boasting about herself. Through tricks and deception, Annabeth manages to bind Arachne inside her own trap, and the other demigods use Argo II to push Arachne down towards Tartarus, located immediately below Arachne's lair. The demigods secure the Athena Parthenos and save Nico; however, Arachne uses her remaining silk to stick Annabeth's feet and pull her down with her, and when Percy attempts to save her, he is pulled down too. Before they both fall, Percy asks Nico to meet them at the other side of the Doors of Death.

While others are uncertain about Percy and Annabeth's fate, Hazel and Nico, being the children of the god of the dead, assure them that the two are not yet dead. Leo, who realizes that Percy and Annabeth's fall are the "consequences" mentioned by Nemesis, feels personally responsible and commands Argo II to set sail towards Greece.

Prophecy

In The Son of Neptune, Ella (a harpy) recited the first two lines of the prophecy concerning the demigods' quest. In The Mark of Athena, Ella recites the whole prophecy in front of both Greek and Roman demigods. Translated from Latin to English, the prophecy reads:

Wisdom's daughter walks alone,
The Mark of Athena burns through Rome,
Twins snuff out the angel's breath,
Who holds the key to endless death.
The Giants' bane stands gold and pale,
Won through pain from a woven jail.

Meaning

This prophecy unravels throughout the story:

1. Annabeth, daughter of Athena, had to complete her own quest alone - without friends or special powers.

2. The Mark of Athena, a coin that led Annabeth through Rome to find the Athena Parthenos.

3. The twins being Ephialtes and Otis kidnapping Nico di Angelo and placed him in a jar with no air. Nico only managed to survive by going into a death trance.

4. Nico has the knowledge of where the two sides of the Doors of Death are, in the Mortal world and in the Underworld. However with the Doors of Death still open, the dead will continue to rise.

5. The fifth line refers to the Athena Parthenos statue, which is made of ivory and gold. It also holds some special power to help defeat the Giants.

6. Annabeth and the crew of the Argo II retrieved the Athena Pathenos from the chamber of Arachne, which was covered in spider webs. Though Annabeth initially believed the "pain" in question was the pain of breaking her ankle, she and Percy fall into Tartarus shortly thereafter. This causes considerable emotional pain to their comrades aboard the Argo II, all of whom blame themselves for failing to save Annabeth and Percy.

Characters

Seven Demigods of the Quest

Other Key Characters

Release

The Mark of Athena was released on October 2, 2012. It is available in hardcover, paperback, eBook and audiobook formats. The following book of the series, The House of Hades, was released on October 8, 2013.[6]

Critical reception

Meann Ortiz of GMA Network gave the book a mixed review, saying that it was interesting to watch the characters grow up in another installment of the series and praised the cliffhanger ending but that the romantic subplots felt forced: "'Girlfriend' and 'boyfriend' are bandied around more times than necessary to establish who is with whom, that I feel like Riordan drops a Relationship Anvil on my head every time I see those words." Overall, Ortiz found the multiple perspective format tiresome and noted that the plot was very similar to that of previous books, saying it was a "testament to Riordan’s skills that the books never end up being too boring and predictable."[7] A reviewer from The Guardian was less troubled, calling this "the best in the series so far" and praising its "funny bits" while noting that the perspective format was lopsided in favor of Annabeth, Percy and Jason.[8]

During its first week, The Mark of Athena sold about 237,000 copies.[9]

References

  1. 1 2 3 "The mark of Athena". LC Online Catalog. Library of Congress (lccn.loc.gov). Retrieved November 9, 2015.
  2. Riordan, Rick. "Rick Riordan's Twitter". @camphalfblood. Disney-Hyperion. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  3. Riordan, Rick (September 27, 2013). "The Mark of Athena Excerpt" (PDF). The Heroes of Olympus. Disney-Hyperion. pp. 1 – 12. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  4. Riordan, Rick (2012). The Mark of Athena. New York, NY: Disney-Hyperion. ISBN 978-1-4231-4060-3.
  5. Atsma, Aaron J. "Hephaistos". Theoi.com. Aaron J. Atsma. Retrieved August 30, 2015.
  6. "First Printing of 3.5 Million Copies Ordered by Disney for Rick Riordan’s Latest Book" (Press release). Printing Impressions. September 27, 2013. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  7. Ortiz, Meann (October 12, 2012). "Rick Riordan's 'The Mark of Athena' is a hit-and-miss affair". GMA Network. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  8. "Heroes of Olympus: the Mark of Athena by Rick Riordan - review". The Guardian. November 22, 2012. Retrieved September 1, 2014.
  9. "A Home Run for 'Hades'". Publishers Weekly. October 18, 2013. Retrieved September 1, 2014.

External links

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