Published: October 6, 2020 Genre: Fantasy / Mythology / Young Adult Series finale: Concludes The Trials of Apollo and serves as a capstone to the entire Camp Half-Blood Chronicles (Percy Jackson, Heroes of Olympus, Kane Chronicles cameos). Synopsis (No Spoilers) Apollo (formerly the god Lester Papadopoulos) has one final prophecy to fulfill: defeat the evil Roman emperor Nero, who has fortified himself in a skyscraper in Manhattan—the Tower of Nero. Accompanied by his demigod master, Meg McCaffrey (Nero’s former stepdaughter), Apollo must confront not only Nero’s mechanical and magical defenses but also the ghost of his own past arrogance. The book weaves together final battles, emotional goodbyes, and Apollo’s last chance at regaining godhood—or choosing mortality. The Good 1. Satisfying Character Arc for Apollo Riordan has always excelled at flawed protagonists, but Apollo’s journey from insufferable god to a genuinely empathetic, self-aware being is his best work since Percy Jackson. By Book 5, Apollo’s humor remains but is now balanced with humility, grief, and courage. His final decision regarding godhood is earned, not forced.
While fun, the book tries to give every living character a “goodbye” moment. This slows down the middle third. A few cameos (e.g., the Hunters of Artemis) add little to the plot. the tower of nero pdf archive
The book directly confronts abusive relationships (Nero as a gaslighting parent figure), PTSD, and the idea that healing is not linear. It’s darker than the original Percy Jackson series but age-appropriate. The Mixed / Criticisms 1. Predictable Plot Beats If you’ve read any Riordan finale, you know the structure: assemble allies, enter the villain’s lair, a betrayal, a last-minute sacrifice, a bittersweet ending. Tower of Nero follows this formula exactly. No major surprises. Published: October 6, 2020 Genre: Fantasy / Mythology