31 Books in 31 Days?! – Blogtober 2022

Well, kinda.

I have a lot of books. So many that they can’t fit on my shelves anymore. So many that I’ve forgotten which ones I own and which ones are still on my list. It’s just slightly a problem that needs fixing.

In the interest of freeing up space (my birthday and Christmas are right around the corner and I usually get some books), I’m trying something to free up at least a few spaces.

Every day during October, I’m picking a random book of my shelf. My options are ones I haven’t read yet that aren’t part of a collection (Owlcrate or Barnes and Nobel’s YA Book Club). That means that a good thirty to forty percent of my current library is up for grabs. Right now I’m letting Mom pick for the first few days, after that I’m putting titles in a hat and picking that way. (I may have forgotten to prep for this thanks to Whumptober and Writer’s Month colliding, on top of some other things, whoops!)

With each book, my goal is to read either 50 pages (novel) or 100 pages (graphic novel). If by that point I’m at least enjoying it, or it hasn’t done anything to be particularly egregious, the book will stay (with the goal to revisit it in November and finish it if I don’t already do that on the day). If there is anything about the book I’m not happy with (art style, writing style, plot, character), I’m donating it.

Yes, that means I’m somewhat judging books by their cover. I’m also going to be very picky. Yep. I’m probably going to be donating more than planned (I have twenty or so books already earmarked to be donated already for various reasons, these will be added to that list).

But I think it’s worth it.

Now, a few caveats. None of these are going to be added to Goodreads this month, unless I finish the book that day (like the graphic novel that was picked for day one, I’m publicly withholding my thoughts until the end of this). I’m also still reading through the Heroes of Olympus series right now (I’m on the last book!). I might end up skipping a day or two due to work related reasons (Monday’s are in office days and the drive sucks).

My goal is to get at least ten books marked for donation. No, I’m not going in with a negative mindset, I just think that ten is a good number to donate. If it’s more or less, I’m okay with that.

So that’s the project. 31 books to be tested out in 31 days. Can I do it? We will have to see what happens. I will do a full write up with titles and brief thoughts when the whole thing is over with.

Until next time!

(I’m adding this to my Reading Challenge tag for a couple reasons. It is a reading challenge by defination. But also, I will not be making my goal this year by a lot, so I’m going to use this tag for any sort of reading challenge that I’m taking part in that is reading related.)

The 2022 Mid Year Book Freak Out!

It’s that time of the year, and this year I’m not wanting to scream because I’m behind!

The Mid Year Book Freak Out Tag was created for Booktubers so long ago that the original video has been privated. Just from a quick search, it looked like at least ten years ago. Since I’m not really doing on camera stuff this year, baring streaming (if my internet is ever stable again, but that’s a rant for another day), it’s always better for me to do this via my blog.

There are 13 questions in the tag that I am again using for this year. I’ve actually read more this year than I though, so there shouldn’t be much doubling up! I’ll also try to keep this spoiler free, or at least spoiler light, but no promises.

Let’s jump into it.

1. Best book you’ve read so far in 2021.

There are two books that have stood out to me this year. One is a book that I reread (because of my reading challenge) and the other is a novella. The Lightning Thief remains one of my favorite middlegrade books of all time, and wow it holds up really well, even after all of these years. Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire is the latest installment in the Wayward Children series series, and I truly do think it’s a great addition to the series.

2. Best sequel you’ve read so far in 2021.

This will have to go to Heartstopper Vol 2-4. I ended up blasting through them last month, since I have it in my head that I can’t watch an adaptation until I’ve read the source material. (I may have not watched the show yet. I’m going to, I promise! Like, next weekend or so!) I just love Alice Oseman’s art style, though I still have some trouble reading the text, but if that’s my only complaint, am I really complaining?

3. New release you haven’t read yet, but want to.

It’s not exactly new, but Alice Oseman’s Loveless has been sitting on my shelf since May, and I really want to crack into it. It was the existence of this book as a Barnes and Noble YA Book Club choice for April that even alerted me to Heartstopper being so blatantly popular. So popular, in fact, that when I went to order the Book Club edition of the book, they’d sold out of it entirely, and it won’t be restocked. When I find a break in my reading schedule, that’s next on the list.

4. Most anticipated release for the second half of the year.

Because of my reading goal, I have to give this to Stellarlune by Shannon Messenger. It’s the penultimate book in the Keeper of the Lost Cities series, and I’m actually curious about it. Well, only mildly, since I’ve only ever read book one, and this is book nine (technically ten, since there was a book 8.5…)

5. Biggest disappointment.

I didn’t think something could make me scream as badly as Blood & Honey did last year. But As Good As Dead by Holly Jackson managed it. The first half of the book felt like a normal Good Girl’s Guide to Murder book, but with protagonist Pip making mistakes and being more paranoid than normal. But the back half? It’s like this other character possessed her and the entire cast and wow, it made no sense. I almost threw it across the parking lot I was sitting in when I finished it. The amount of four letter words was… telling.

6. Biggest surprise.

We Were Dreamers by Simu Liu. It’s his first autobiography, telling his story. His life has been insane, and his voice came right out of the page. I read it on a whim and I absolutely loved every second of it.

7. Favorite new author. (Debut or new to you)

So here’s the problem. Everyone on my list I’ve either read, or they just wrote a one off, or they aren’t an author I’d probably pick up again, because I didn’t really enjoy their book. I haven’t read anyone new to me this year (yet, I do have a few books I’m planning on cracking into very soon).

8. Newest fictional crush.

Look, everything I’ve read this year has basically featured exclusively under-18 characters. There isn’t a way I can answer this without it being creepy.

… Simu Liu. There. I’m gonna go rewatch Shang-Chi now.

9. Newest fictional character.

Jason from The Heroes of Olympus series. While I do like all the new characters, I think Jason has had the most potential in this series (I’ve only read through three, no spoilers over books that have been out for years!). There’s something about an amnesiac character trying his best through no fault of his own, but still succeeding on his quest, that just does it for me.

10. Book that made you cry.

There’s a specific scene in The Last Olympian that downright made me sob, and I read it while I was at work (luckily, work from home that day). I won’t say what, but it more than earned it’s 5-star rating that day.

11. Book that made you happy.

(I did this last year and I’m stealing it again.) Sarcastic answer incomingWatch Over Me by Nina LaCour. I downright one of her previous novels, We Are Okay, which came out in 2017. But Watch Over Me just did not do it for me in any way. I sped read that book just to get it over with, and I was happy to do so, since I was bored.

12. Most beautiful book you’ve bought so far this year (or received).

Every. Single. Owlcrate. Book. Released. This. Year. No serious, google them. For the most part they are either entirely redesigned, or the coloring is much different. I’ve really enjoyed seeing how Owlcrate works with the publishers for most books since one of my favorites years ago (Eliza and her Monsters, highly recommended!). Nine times out of ten, I love them more.

13. What books do you need to read by the end of the year?

… Well. I guess this is when I give an update on my lovely “Remy’s Reading Challenge!” Let me get my calculator. Well, basically… 39 novels and a bunch of short stories. Yeah, I’m way behind. (Technically since I’m no longer apart of that friend group, I don’t have to do that challenge, and damn that reminds me of a joke for another day, but I’m doing the challenge anyway.) Beyond that, there’s a bunch of other books I want to jump into, it’s just that I have it in my head that I can’t step away from a series until I reach a natural stopping point (end of that specific book series, like The Heroes of Olympus for example). I’m going to try to get through more by the end of the year. It just depends on how busy I get with work, since that has to be my priority.

And that’s the tag! I’ve done this for a few years now, and it’s always fun to see how my answers change. I really do enjoy doing things like this, so let me know if you want me to look for some other book tags across Youtube/Tiktok. I’ll look for them!

Until next time!

Book Review: .hack//Another Birth Volume 1: Infection by Miu Kawasaki

Title: Volume 1: Infection

Author: Miu Kawasaki

Series: .hack//Another Birth

Publish Date: June 13, 2006

Publisher: TokyoPop

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

In order for Akira to save her younger brother, who suddenly loses consciousness in the middle of playing The World, she enters the online fantasy game as the Heavy Blade-wielding BlackRose. While heading toward the area where her brother’s consciousness was stolen, BlackRose meets the Twin Blade fighter Kite. Written from BlackRose’s perspective, this adaptation of the popular .hack series of games is the first installment of yet another hit .hack novel series!

Review: I was in the mood for a bit of a nostalgia trip going into the weekend, and so I picked up my old copy of Infection. It’s been a long time since I read through this light novel, about five years according to Goodreads. For a bit of backstory, I only ever played the first game (I was late getting a PS2 and none of my friends played RPGs beyond Kingdom Hearts and some Final Fantasy. But I liked the associated anime and read the books to understand the world a bit. Since then, I have also watched some Let’s Plays of the games, and I have a passing knowledge of the storyline of this side of the series.

As for Infection, I still think it holds up. Akira is a young teenager dealing with the trauma of discovering her brother’s comatose body, on top of the normal issues with school life. She has to deal with bullying, her intense sense of pride in her favorite sport, helping out her family more than ever, and also working to discover exactly what happened to Fumikazu while inside The World. 

There are flaws in the story being told. Some of the writing doesn’t land right, some of the dialogue shared between BlackRose and Kite are flipped (as the story is told from BlackRose’s POV and she comes off pretty harsh in the game), and some scenes feel rushed. A passing knowledge of the series helps, though you can probably figure out what’s going on without much extra googling (though it is fun to do so). 

For a nostalgia read, this was a fun little read down memory lane. I’ll probably finish the other three volumes over the next few days.

Rating: 3.5/5 (Rounded up for Goodreads)

Goodreads Goal 11/52

[Edit note:] For the sake of length (and posts), I’ll be combining the reviews for the other three volumes of this series into one post on Sunday. But right now I’m pretty sure I’m on a reading spree, so don’t be surprised to see a lot more book reviews in the coming weeks. <3

Book Review: Watch Over Me by Nina LaCour

Title: Watch Over Me

Author: Nina LaCour

Series: Standalone

Publish Date: January 18, 2022 (Originally published September 15, 2020)

Publisher: Rocky Pond Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

A modern ghost story about trauma and survival, Watch Over Me is the much-anticipated new novel from the Printz Award-winning author of We Are Okay

Mila is used to being alone.

Maybe that’s why she said yes. Yes to a second chance in this remote place, among the flowers and the fog and the crash of waves far below.

But she hadn’t known about the ghosts.

Newly graduated from high school, Mila has aged out of the foster care system. So when she’s offered a teaching job and a place to live on an isolated part of the Northern California coast, she immediately accepts. Maybe she will finally find a new home–a real home. The farm is a refuge, but it’s also haunted by the past. And Mila’s own memories are starting to rise to the surface.

Nina LaCour, the Printz Award-winning author of We Are Okay, delivers another emotional knockout with Watch Over Me about trauma and survival, chosen family and rebirth.

Review: I feel conflicted.

On one hand, the book delivered on exactly what was described in the summary. On the other, I’m walking away feeling dissatisfied.

Unlike Ms. LaCour’s previous novel, We Are Okay, I struggled to stay engaged in this novel. It’s not that it was poorly written, because it wasn’t. The writing style was exactly what I remember from the previous novel. No, it was that I found the story… boring. Or, in another word, uninspiring. Like I’ve read this story before.

I knew going in that this would be a book dealing with trauma and healing. After all, our main character, Mila, had a traumatic moment in her past that sticks with her years later. But the climax of Mila overcoming that trauma comes late into the book, and it just didn’t hit me. Mila also came off the page as bland, going through the motions, with bursts of movement that felt disjointed from her narration.

Besides Lee, the young boy that Mila is in charge of, I had trouble distinguishing a majority of the characters. I got confused for a bit because I couldn’t tell apart the other two interns from the couple that is running the farm. I wanted to know more about all the characters, and for the most part we just got a line or two of backstory and that’s it.

In a way, this book felt like one of those artsy indie films you might see at a small independent theater. It tells a story, and it does okay with what time it has, but unless you are immediately caught by the plot, you are just left watching flashing pictures on the screen. In this case, I totally understood what I was supposed to get, but I just set the book down completed and moved on.

This won’t turn me away from reading other books by Ms. LaCour, because as I said I did enjoy her previous book. I am just reminded that maybe this one just didn’t do it for me. And that’s okay.

Rating: 3/5

Goodreads Goal 10/52

Book Review: We Were Dreamers by Simu Liu

Title: We Were Dreamers: An Immigrant Superhero Origin Story

Author: Simu Liu

Series: Standalone

Publish Date: May 07, 2022

Publisher: William Morrow

Format: eBook

Goodreads Summary:

Marvel’s newest recruit shares his own inspiring and unexpected origin story, from China to the bright lights of Hollywood. An immigrant who battles everything from parental expectations to cultural stereotypes, Simu Liu struggles to forge a path for himself, rising from the ashes of a failed accounting career (yes, you read that right) to become Shang-Chi. […]

We Were Dreamers is more than a celebrity memoir – it’s a story about growing up between cultures, finding your family, and becoming the master of your own extraordinary circumstance. [Summary cut for length.]

Review: I’m not normally one to read memoirs. They usually bore me, or I was “forced” into reading one for an assignment.

That is not the case here. 

I chose to pick up Simu Liu’s memoir for one reason. I wanted to get to know one of Marvel’s newest superheroes. I had never watched anything he was in previously (either it wasn’t available to me, or didn’t appeal to my tastes). I figured I might learn something from his book, or at least just have something that would get me through the workday. And I ended up pleasantly surprised.

Simu’s voice comes through with every line, raw and authentic. He talks about his life from before he was ever thought of, until that moment of standing in front of the camera on day one of Shang-Chi and hearing “action.” But beyond that is a profound look into the lives of Chinese immigrants, from day on until eventual and hard-fought success. I feel like I learned just as much about Simu as I did about the struggles of those who left their entire lives and cultures behind to chase the dream of success.

What I really enjoyed was that Simu didn’t shy away from his failures. He put a spin on them, sure, made them entertaining to read and listen to, but beneath the humor was stress and sadness. It worked well in my opinion. His failures were given the same weight as his successes. And I think that’s what makes me walk away from this book impressed.

For Marvel fans looking to know more about one of their actors, this one is an absolute must read.

Rating: 4/5

Goodreads Goal 9/52

Book Review: The Lost Hero by Rick Riordan

Title: The Lost Hero

Author: Rick Riordan

Series: The Heroes of Olympus, Camp Half-Blood Chronicles

Publish Date: September 24, 2019 (originally published October 12, 2010)

Publisher: Disney Hyperion Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

Jason has a problem. He doesn’t remember anything before waking up on a school bus holding hands with a girl. Apparently she’s his girlfriend Piper, his best friend is a kid named Leo, and they’re all students in the Wilderness School, a boarding school for “bad kids.” What he did to end up here, Jason has no idea-except that everything seems very wrong.

Piper has a secret. Her father has been missing for three days, and her vivid nightmares reveal that he’s in terrible danger. Now her boyfriend doesn’t recognize her, and when a freak storm and strange creatures attack during a school field trip, she, Jason, and Leo are whisked away to someplace called Camp Half-Blood. What is going on?

Leo has a way with tools. His new cabin at Camp Half-Blood is filled with them. Seriously, the place beats Wilderness School hands down, with its weapons training, monsters, and fine-looking girls. What’s troubling is the curse everyone keeps talking about, and that a camper’s gone missing. Weirdest of all, his bunkmates insist they are all-including Leo-related to a god.

Rick Riordan, the best-selling author of the Percy Jackson series, pumps up the action and suspense in The Lost Hero, the first book in The Heroes of Olympus series. Fans of demi-gods, prophesies, and quests will be left breathless–and panting in anticipation for Book Two. 

Review: Well, I wasn’t expecting to like this book. But I did, a lot.

When I first picked this one up, I recognized the first two chapters. But that was where my reading had ended. And honestly, it took me a bit to get into this one, based entirely on those two chapters. While I have a passing knowledge of this pentalogy (as well as the other novels from the series as a whole), I didn’t know exactly how this would go. I was pleasantly surprised!

Having one of the main characters be amnesiac was an interesting narrative choice, especially with the tiny details being slipped in. Jason is clearly a complex character stuck between two worlds, and he’s lucky to have two built-in friends to help him navigate this. One small detail bothered me, however: the reveal that he is Thalia’s much younger brother. I would have rather that surprise have come when Thalia came into the story, instead of being pretty early on. But that’s just personal preference.

For new main characters, I found Piper and Leo’s voices to be strong. They both had pasts that drove them forward, bending them but not breaking them. However, I feel that they are a bit overpowered, especially Leo (the first child of Hephaestus who can control fire in centuries). But, they back it up by making him a part of the Second Great Prophecy.

Actually, I do have a slight issue. Does everyone know about the prophecy? It’s mentioned I don’t even know how many times that Jason, Piper, and Leo have to be a part of it. I mean, I’m not surprised that everyone at Camp Half-Blood knows, but it’s just treated as general knowledge, which is the opposite of how the first prophecy (which drove the first pentalogy) was treated.

Something that made me happy was to see the characters from the original pentalogy still around, not just completely sidelined. Annabeth isn’t in this much, considering that she’s searching for Percy. Rachel makes appearances, similar to how she did since her introduction. Others also make appearances that fit their characters.

I was also surprised that this book did away with the “one book a year” thing that the first series had (every book barring the third was set a year later from the first, similar to Harry Potter). Starting in winter immediately shows me that Roirden did something different with this series, and I’m happy about it.

All in all, this was a pretty satisfying opening to the next part of the series. I’m looking forward to seeing exactly how everything plays out.

Rating: 4/5

Goodreads Goal 8/52

Book Review: The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan

Title: The Last Olympian

Author: Rick Riordan

Series: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Camp Half-Blood Chronicles

Publish Date: June 3, 2014 (originally published May 5, 2009)

Publisher: Disney Hyperion Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

All year the half-bloods have been preparing for battle against the Titans, knowing the odds of victory are grim. Kronos’s army is stronger than ever, and with every god and half-blood he recruits, the evil Titan’s power only grows.

While the Olympians struggle to contain the rampaging monster Typhon, Kronos begins his advance on New York City, where Mount Olympus stands virtually unguarded. Now it’s up to Percy Jackson and an army of young demigods to stop the Lord of Time.

In the momentous final book in the New York Times best-selling series, the long-awaited prophecy surrounding Percy’s sixteenth birthday unfolds. And as the battle for Western civilization rages on the streets of Manhattan, Percy faces a terrifying suspicion that he may be fighting against his own fate.

Review: It should come to no surprise that my first reaction to finishing this was WOW, followed by, “What’s the next book and which shelf did I put it on?”

I realized early on that I hadn’t ever finished this book. In fact, I don’t think I read it when I was younger. I stopped at the end of The Battle of the Labyrinth, because I didn’t want the series to end for me. But let me tell you, it was worth waiting all these years, because it just blew my mind out of the water. (And I totally read it while in training for my new job, since we’re in a holding pattern anyways, and what better way to keep motivated than the final battle between the Olympians and the Titans.

This was a satisfying conclusion to the series. The title refers to Hestia, the Goddess of the Hearth, as she is the only one of the Olympians to stay behind at Olympus. The prophecy refers not to Percy, but to Luke, though both are heroes in the finale of the battle. The Oracle finally moves onto a new host, in this case being Rachel. And of course, Percy and Annabeth finally get together after the final battle.

I was really happy with the pacing of this novel. The story only takes place over a few days, but what is told works. We finally learn the history behind Luke’s family and what caused him to turn his back on his friends. We also learned so much about the choices that Annabeth had to make when she left home, and how this has shaped every decision that she has had to make her entire life. Percy has to make some decisions that could have devastating consequences on both his family and the world, and the book justifies each decision.

Reading these books as an adult has been amazing. I’m seeing things that I would have never picked up on when I first read them, because I was still in the mindset that “Middle Grade books just aren’t that good.” Obviously my opinions have changed in the past several years. And as a finale, this book is solid. It sets up for the next set of books without being too overt or heavy-handed. It’s still a solid ending for people who just don’t want to continue past this book, which is totally fine. (Unlike me, who technically has to keep going. And I am.)

I’m very impressed. And I can’t wait to jump back into this world very soon.

Rating: 5/5

Goodreads Goal 7/52

Book Review: Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan

Title: Battle of the Labyrinth

Author: Rick Riordan

Series: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Camp Half-Blood Chronicles

Publish Date: June 3, 2014 (originally published May 6, 2008)

Publisher: Disney Hyperion Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

Percy Jackson isn’t expecting freshman orientation to be any fun. But when a mysterious mortal acquaintance appears at his potential new school, followed by demon cheerleaders, things quickly move from bad to worse.

In this fourth installment of the blockbuster series, time is running out as war between the Olympians and the evil Titan lord Kronos draws near. Even the safe haven of Camp Half-Blood grows more vulnerable by the minute as Kronos’s army prepares to invade its once impenetrable borders. To stop the invasion, Percy and his demigod friends must set out on a quest through the Labyrinth – a sprawling underground world with stunning surprises at every turn.

Review: The plot thickens, battle lines are being drawn, and all the players are taking their sides.

Starting this book for the first time since I was a teenager was an experience. The series has managed to mature with the characters, which I believe is helped by the fact that each book represents a summer (barring the previous book, which was the only winter book of the five, and the midpoint). Percy is getting older, and it’s clear that a crush (mutual, though he doesn’t know it yet) is growing in Annabeth. 

The decisions that the heroes have to make are more serious then ever before, such as deciding to not kill Ethan in a battle to the death. Percy sees the dark side of being a demigod, and how his actions have massive consequences.

Though there are times I had to remind myself that these kids are just fifteen or so, the choices and mistakes they make are completely believable, but also tragic. They are, after all, tasked with an almost impossible quest for the fourth time in their young lives. But they survive it, though not without loss.

The decision to start wrapping up series spanning plot lines works well here, starting with Grover’s journey to find Pan. I was saddened to see such a scene be so short in comparison to the size of the quest, but I also understood it. And it was a warning to all that read the books, that we need to do more.

I’m actually hesitant to read the fifth book coming out of this one (which is the same feeling I was left with the last time I read through the series). I almost don’t want it to end, but I do because I have the entire rest of the saga to read through. I mean, I’m absolutely going to, but still. STRESS.

For being a book that leads into the finale, it doesn’t feel like a set up. Yes, there are plotlines left waiting to be wrapped up, but the main storyline is completed, and it holds up. I’m happy with this one.

Rating: 5/5

Goodreads Goal 6/52

[Edit Update: This novel was originally read on March 28, 2022.]

Book Review: The Titan’s Curse by Rick Riordan

Title: The Titan’s Curse

Author: Rick Riordan

Series: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Camp Half-Blood Chronicles

Publish Date: June 3, 2014 (originally published May 1, 2007)

Publisher: Disney Hyperion Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

When Percy Jackson receives an urgent distress call from his friend Grover, he immediately prepares for battle. He knows he’ll need his powerful demigod allies at his side; his trusty bronze sword, Riptide; and . . . a ride from his mom.

The demigods race to the rescue to find that Grover has made an important discovery: two new powerful half-bloods, whose parentage is unknown. But that’s not all that awaits them. The Titan lord, Kronos, has set up a devious trap, and the young heroes have just fallen prey.

Hilarious and action-packed, this third adventure in the series finds Percy faced with his most dangerous challenge yet—the chilling prophecy of the Titan’s curse.

Review: As Percy matures, so do his stories.

This installment doesn’t take place over the summer, but rather during winter break, only about six months after Sea of Monsters. Percy is now fourteen and starting to really understand this whole hero gig he’s involved in.

We also get to see just how dangerous the world really is, as the stakes rise higher with every passing quest. The Titans are getting more bold in their plans, and they cleverly use the half-bloods’ own fatal flaws against them.

One of the things I really enjoyed about this one is that we don’t really get all that much detail about two introduced characters, one of whom will go on to be a major character. [For context, I’m already midway through book 4, but this isn’t too much of a spoiler.] The reveal that something isn’t quite… right about Bianca and Nico di Angelo is carefully unfolded over the course of the novel, while leaving a lot for readers to discover in future installments.

While I did appreciate the introduction of Artemis’ Hunters, I kinda felt that they were just introduced to get Talia out of the way. We spent two novels hearing about her, and now she gets to take Annabeth’s spot as Percy’s right handed woman for this novel… only for the ending to happen. I totally understand why this decision was given, no spoilers obviously, but at the same time it felt like the author didn’t know what to do with two strong female characters. 

One thing that stands out to me is that Percy isn’t just a perfect character. He makes mistakes, he screws up, he talks back to Gods when he needs to… And I enjoy that. I also like that the Gods and Goddesses feel more fleshed out in this novel (at least a bit more, anyway), as Percy ends up having several different interactions with them.

All in all, it’s still a great book that is setting up for what seems to be a satisfying conclusion, though there is a part of me that felt like this novel did suffer a bit from fatigue halfway through. 

Rating: 4.5/5

Goodreads Goal 5/52

[Edit Update: This novel was originally read on March 27, 2022.]

Book Review: The Sea of Monsters by Rick Riordan

Title: The Sea of Monsters

Author: Rick Riordan

Series: Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Camp Half-Blood Chronicles

Publish Date: June 3, 2014 (originally published April 1, 2006)

Publisher: Disney Hyperion Books

Format: Paperback

Goodreads Summary:

The heroic son of Poseidon makes an action-packed comeback in the second must-read installment of Rick Riordan’s amazing young readers series. Starring Percy Jackson, a “half blood” whose mother is human and whose father is the God of the Sea, Riordan’s series combines cliffhanger adventure and Greek mythology lessons that results in true page-turners that get better with each installment.

In this episode, The Sea of Monsters, Percy sets out to retrieve the Golden Fleece before his summer camp is destroyed, surpassing the first book’s drama and setting the stage for more thrills to come.

Review: Percy just can’t catch a break, I swear.

In this edition of “why my summer vacation is more amazing compared to yours,” Percy learns that he’s related to cyclops’s, has a half-brother named Tyson, plays some part in a major prophecy that no one will tell him about, and he really needs to just go on a vacation. I hear the Bermuda Triangle is lovely this time of year.

The thing that makes this book fun is that it’s clear that Percy has learned from the events of the previous summer, but he’s still just barely a teenager. He still makes mistakes and he still has to deal with the consequences, but he’s also more aware of those mistakes. He’s also willing to work with people that he really really doesn’t want to, in this case Clarisse La Rue, daughter of Ares. They come to a begrudging respect by the end of the novel, but they are in no way friends (which is fine).

Annabeth joins Percy on his God given quest (thanks Hermes), and learns more about herself than she could have ever believed. She has the opportunity to hear the Siren’s Song, and make peace with a part of her past that caused a minor wedge between Percy and Tyson before his almost-death early in the novel.

One aspect of this novel that I enjoyed was that choices and decisions mattered. The simple act of poisoning Thalia’s tree almost destroys the entire camp. This causes Chiron to be fired (because Dionysus is still a jerk), and in his place comes Tantalus from the underworld. Percy goes after the Golden Fleece, which is successful, but using it to heal Thalia’s tree ends up freeing her from it, which means there are now two Half-Bloods that are related to the “Big Three”. It’s a dangerous prospect.

I was sad to see that both Luke and Grover were pretty underutilized in this. Luke is now a henchman for Kronos working to revive the Titan. He’s pretty much all talk, though there is one fight scene with Percy that shows he still has his skills. Grover, on the other hand, is completely reduced to being just a plot device, there to be saved. It sucks for him, but there’s nothing for him in this novel.

All in all, a satisfying continuation of the series, one that I haven’t read in almost fifteen years.

Rating: 55/5

Goodreads Goal 4/52

[Edit Update: This novel was originally read on March 18, 2022.]