
**Minor Spoilers**
I have to say this is best of the Trials of Apollo series so far. We’ve settle in nicely into Apollo/Lester’s to rescue the oracles from the Triumvirate and earn his place back on Olympus but the stacks are much higher than ever before. If I had one issue with Rick’s works is the lack of consequences for the main characters. The life of demigods are often faced with many deadly trials but somehow always managed to live. After a while, the near death experiences lose their impact when the reader knows the character is going to live because they are after all the hero. True as readers we want them to live and have their happy endings but you can’t keep stating how dangerous demigods lives are if they never truly see the consequences but I digress. Apollo and Meg explore the Burning Maze with the help of Grover. This leads them to California where the west has been dealing with unprecedented wildfires. Either Rick knew that California would dealing with wildfires in real life or just coincidence. It would be nice if a few demigods could go in a maze, defeat an enchantress and stop the wildfires but alas it doesn’t work that way. The maze brings them to Meg’s former home and the help of Piper and Jason. Our heroes face the third Emperor who is by far the most dangerous. More than anything, we are seeing the most growth in Apollo is this one. He’s still Apollo so the ego is still big but it has had some bruising. He’s starting to understand his own humanity as he’s understanding that he is no longer immortal and is truly vulnerable. Apollo is slowly embracing his humanity and with that comes all the joys and the pain that comes with it. More than anything, if he is going to complete his quest he is going to have to become more human and depend on his friends to do it. The stacks are much higher than they have ever been in one of Rick’s series and making of powerful series.
***Minor Spoilers***
A satisfying ending to a very good series. It starts just minutes after the end of King’s Cage, where Mare is reeling from being betrayed by Cal choosing the crown over her. I wasn’t really all that surprised by this because as much as he loves Mare and has been open to the red plight but he is a Silver Prince that was born to rule. He’s going to give that up? Anyway, Victoria does a great job of balancing her Game of Thronesque story lines. With so many families, groups and countries vying for the future of Norta the story could have been easily bogged down but it isn’t. Alliances are clear and who is going to betray who is clear. We all know who is on what team and when it comes down to it who is going to side with who when it comes to the end it didn’t disrupt the storyline. At the moment, Mare and Cal are reunited in the same objective of get Maven out of power but their alliance is shaky at best. We know that Cal has no intention of giving up his throne as he feels he is the best to reunite his fractured nation but the Scarlet Guard has no intention of putting him on the throne. Maven has the Nortan crown but little support. Iris, his wife from neighboring country the Lakelands, is already scheming to take the crown from Maven as soon as he depletes his army against Cal. The western nation of Montfort that is the only democracy in this new world that has silvers and reds working together has made their intentions known that they will not have another silver king either. So who wins? Well that would be too spoilery but I will say i like the ambiguous ending. Victoria has definitely left enough open that if she ever wanted to return to Norta, Monfort or the Lakelands she could but if she doesn’t then she has given her characters a good send off. Mare is broken and bruised but is working on healing. She has been many people throughout the four books. She’s been Mare from the sticks, a thief. She’s been Mareena, a lost Silver and the lightning girl a leader and inspiration for the rebellion but who is she really. Cal’s growth is quite as strong but then again I think Cal has already had a good sense of who he was. Maven is probably the most tragic. The abuse that he suffered from his mother is beyond cruel but that shouldn’t excuse his many crimes he committed throughout the series. My biggest complaint is that Cameron who was one of POV characters in the last book only makes an appearance in one chapter. Other than that, this was a satisfying ending to a very good series.
The final book in the Talon Saga was kinda of a disappointment in the sense that I didn’t really love it only liked it. It took a really long time to get going and for the final book the lack of urgency was a strange. The characters kept telling each other about how the end is coming soon but really didn’t seem to be in much of a hurry to prepare for it until they had no choice to and then things Finally got going. But damn, we had to go through a lot of things to get there. There was the unnecessary trip to Brazil to meet an ancient dragon that was never mentioned before and there was another trip to Asia for the that we all knew how it would end up. There were past mentioned characters showing up and taking up time for no reason but fit in one more heroic arc? I don’t know. The finale however was worth it though. The final battle between the Rogues, St. George and Talon made up the lackluster beginning. It had drama, suspense and melodrama all wrapped into one. I appreciate the theme of the series being that even though we may be different, what we all want out of life is the same. We want to live in peace and have freedom of choice. And authoritative governments are bad. The best way to bring down an oppressive regime is to overcome our differences and work together and learn from each other. I very important message for today. That’s what you should take away from this series in the end. I just wished the last book wasn’t so bogged down in so many side trips.
I received this as an ARC a month ago. Thank you to the publisher for making it available.