Reviews

La Profecía Oscura / The Dark Prophecy by Rick Riordan

kathi_mllr's review against another edition

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adventurous funny medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

silenthillda's review against another edition

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adventurous funny hopeful lighthearted fast-paced

3.75

izzy11's review against another edition

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adventurous funny fast-paced

5.0

crowleysbentley's review against another edition

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4.0



meg >> life

normalpeople2005's review against another edition

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adventurous dark tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0

warming up the applo as the narrator liked this more then the first looking forward to the 3rd this one had a real og percy jackson feel

worldsunlikeourown's review against another edition

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4.0

Find this review and more on my blog at Worlds Unlike Our Own.

Re-read: November 2019

“There once was a god named Apollo
Who plunged in a cave, blue and hollow
Upon a three seater
The bronze fire eater
Was forced death and madness to swallow”


With the first of the oracles, the Grove of Dodona, restored, Apollo finally has a prophecy (though one in limerick form that apparently bodes ill), and with the newly returned Leo and Calypso along for the quest, Apollo heads west to Indianapolis to find the second oracle, Trophonius and face the next Emperor, Commodus. But his demigod master Meg betrayed him to Nero and has been ordered to find and capture Apollo before he can free the next oracle – and Meg can make Apollo do anything, even kill himself.

“It’s not how long you live that matters. It’s what you live for.”

As with the first book, Apollo’s narration is an absolute delight to read, and the haikus in every chapter are hilariously appropriate. He still rather looks down his nose at humans, but the experiences and trials he is going through is fast changing that. Apollo is still largely his narcissistic self, but even as he recalls events from his past, he is starting to look upon his previous deeds through a different lens, recognizing that some of his actions were wrong and even regretting them – something godly him would never do.

Things are getting more exciting as we are finally in the ‘quest’ portion of this series, which means more or less continuous action. I love how this series is moving deeper into Greek and Roman mythology, to the stories that are not as widely known – and giving me a whole lot of stuff to look up and learn about in the process! The humour is still on point – can we take a second to appreciate how hilarious the Shakespeare-esque Arrow of Dodona is? And the blemmyae were a riot too!

It was also great to have Leo back (and Festus too!) – though we all knew he would turn up again eventually, I didn’t really expect another book where he would be a central character. Looks like our original heroes aren’t going to be on the sidelines after all, what with both Grover and Jason set to be in the sequel. I’m kind of ambivalent on Calypso for reasons I can’t really pinpoint, and she was an okay character for the most part, just not as stand out as I hoped she’d be, especially considering the amazing female characters we’ve seen so far, like Annabeth, Clarisse, Thalia, Reyna, Piper and so many others. It was just really hard to get a fix on her personality (of which I saw startlingly little) in the span of a single book, which, it appears, is all we’ll be getting.

I have to say though, the timescale in this series is really throwing me off. This book seems to take place over about five days and follows in close succession to book 1. And having read the next two books, this scale doesn’t change – does this mean this entire series is actually going to take place over approximately a month or so? It’s not a bad thing necessarily, but for the amount of things going on, it feels unrealistic that it could all be happening so close together.

With this book, I’ve finally finished my Percy Jackson re-read, and it’s surprising how many small details I’ve forgotten over the years! Though I remembered the basic plot, it was lovely to read all the books again, and listening to the audiobooks was definitely a good idea for these, as the narration is wonderful – I would highly recommend it! As for The Dark Prophecy itself, I don’t know how Rick Riordan manages it, but each book is better, not to mention funnier, than the last, and at this stage, I’m pretty sure it’s impossible for any book set in this world to be even remotely bad. Highly recommended!
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Originally read: May 2017
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antivancrowe's review against another edition

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4.5

Character 4| Setting 5| Plot 4| Writing 5| Enjoyability 5

Rating: 4.6

I enjoy reading about Apollo's past and hearing his fuck ups. Oh noooo the consequences of my actions(and inaction) are coming full swing! 

What I really liked about this volume is really expanding on Apollo's relationships with his children and how he has failed them and also really showing Apollo seeing why Quests kind of suck for demigods. 

I enjoy Apollo and the arrow of prophecy going back and forth it made me chuckle quite a few times!

I loved Apollo getting like secret missions with Calypso and then just going with Meg to the cave of prophecies. It was fun to see how he worked with Calypso seeing as how they butted heads. 

There was a lot of fun things happening in this  novel. So I am excited to keep going on, also I crave the sense of angst when things went wrong with meg. It was so emotional and very good. I loved it

camille_abelanet's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark funny medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

3.5/5. Liked it more than The Hidden Oracle for sure, but it’s still not as good as Rick’s other series. I do love the found family, the character growth, and the horrible Haikus.

cierralovesliterature's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging funny fast-paced

4.25

apollos character development better be insanely good in book 3 like let’s get serious pls
also so excited to see grover again 
also i neeed more will/nico content

van_worldexplorer's review against another edition

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5.0

Absolutely loved it. This series gets better. I loved how we’re really seeing old (main) characters come back and see how Apollo has to deal with his old flame! I love the character growth here and also everything about this one.