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58 chapters - View chapters
| Name | Aliases | Role |
|---|---|---|
Annabeth Chase A daughter of Athena and Percy's closest companion and eventual partner. Brilliant, driven, and deeply competitive, she has been training at Camp Half-Blood since she was seven. Her fatal flaw is hubris - she believes she can do anything. Her arc through the series is about learning that intelligence alone is not enough and that asking for help is not weakness. | Wise Girl, Daughter of Athena | Protagonist |
Frank Zhang A son of Mars - the Roman aspect of Ares - with the ability to transform into any animal. Descendant of Poseidon through the Chinese demigod tradition. His life is literally tied to a piece of firewood. One of the most genuinely kind characters in the Riordanverse. | Son of Mars | Protagonist |
Hazel Levesque A daughter of Pluto - the Roman aspect of Hades - and one of three Roman heroes given the prophecy that opens The Son of Neptune. Quiet, watchful, and carrying a past she rarely talks about, Hazel can sense and control precious metals and gems underground - a gift she finds as much a burden as an advantage. She fights alongside Frank Zhang in the Fifth Cohort at Camp Jupiter. | Daughter of Pluto | Protagonist |
Jason Grace A son of Jupiter - the Roman aspect of Zeus - and praetor of Camp Jupiter. Wakes at the start of The Lost Hero with his memory erased. His arc through Heroes of Olympus is about the tension between Greek and Roman identity and what it means to lead. Thalia Grace's younger brother. | Son of Jupiter | Protagonist |
Leo Valdez A son of Hephaestus with the rare ability to generate and control fire. The comic relief of the Heroes of Olympus ensemble who turns out to be carrying more grief than he lets anyone see, particularly when it comes to his mother and the workshop fire that took her. | Bad Boy Supreme, Son of Hephaestus | Protagonist |
Percy Jackson A son of Poseidon who discovers his divine heritage at age twelve when monsters begin attacking him. Over five books he grows from a confused kid who can breathe underwater into the demigod at the centre of the Great Prophecy. His fatal flaw is excessive personal loyalty - he would risk the world to save the people he loves. Continues as a major character through Heroes of Olympus and appears in later series. | Seaweed Brain, The Son of Poseidon | Protagonist |
Piper McLean A daughter of Aphrodite with the power of charmspeak - the ability to make people do what she says. Self-conscious about her heritage in a series where beauty and love magic are considered less impressive than combat powers. Her arc is about redefining what strength looks like. | Daughter of Aphrodite | Protagonist |
Nico di Angelo A son of Hades who first appears as a cheerful ten-year-old obsessed with a card game and becomes one of the most powerful and isolated characters in the series. His arc across both the PJO and HoO series is about surviving grief, accepting his sexuality, and finding that belonging is possible even for someone who lives between worlds. | Ghost King, Son of Hades | Major |
Reyna Avila Ramírez-Arellano Praetor of Camp Jupiter and one of the most capable leaders in the series. Daughter of Bellona, Roman goddess of war. Her arc in Blood of Olympus is one of the series' best subplots. | Reyna, Praetor of Camp Jupiter | Major |
| Name | Type |
|---|---|
| Camp Half-Blood | Organisation |
| Camp Jupiter | Organisation |
| Crew of the Argo II | Organisation |
| The Seven | Organisation |
| Date | Event | Details |
|---|---|---|
7 October 2014 | Publication | The concluding volume of Heroes of Olympus received somewhat mixed reviews relative to its predecessors, with some critics feeling the resolution did not fully deliver on the series' accumulated promise while others praised the emotional payoff of the long-running character arcs. The decision to exclude Percy and Annabeth as point of view characters in the finale was particularly noted as a divisive structural choice. Debuted at number one on the New York Times children's bestseller list. The Heroes of Olympus sequence as a whole is generally regarded as ambitious and entertaining if uneven, with its strongest individual volumes considered equal to the best of the original Percy Jackson series. |
2016 | Award Won | Geffen Award YA book category |
The concluding volume of Heroes of Olympus received somewhat mixed reviews relative to its predecessors, with some critics feeling the resolution did not fully deliver on the series' accumulated promise while others praised the emotional payoff of the long-running character arcs. The decision to exclude Percy and Annabeth as point of view characters in the finale was particularly noted as a divisive structural choice. Debuted at number one on the New York Times children's bestseller list. The Heroes of Olympus sequence as a whole is generally regarded as ambitious and entertaining if uneven, with its strongest individual volumes considered equal to the best of the original Percy Jackson series.
Geffen Award
YA book category