The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson & the Olympians #1)

 
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wow try this book
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by Dj


This book is about Percy Jackson growing up as a Half-blood he has been kicked out of many schools because eather he has blowen it up, made a monster pretending to be a human turn into dust because he won a battle, or just failing all his classes because because he has Dyslexia and ADHD this is one hard life and can i add that he has the HORRIBLE step dad in the world.
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Awesome series!
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Reader reviewed by Chantele


Percy Jackson isn't your ordinary 12 year old. He has been kicked out
of multiple schools, for disrupting classes, and has moved several
times over the years. He has been diagnosed with ADHD, and dyslexia, which doesn't help the situation much.  Little does he know, there is a much bigger
reason he has moved, and why he has such a hard time in school.
 After
his math teacher turns into a monster on a field trip, Percy suddenly
wonders what is wrong with him. No one believes him, and he starts to
think he is going crazy. Soon after, he is chased by the ancient
Minotaur, and suddenly thrust into an adventure of a lifetime. Percy
finds out he is the son of one of the Gods of Mount Olympus. Only,
which one?
After arriving at a summer camp for "halfbloods", Percy
is accused of stealing Zeus's master lightning bolt. He is then sent on
a quest to find it. With the help of a few friends, he starts an
amazing adventure, which leads him to places he never dreamed of going.
Does he find out who his father is? Will he find out why he has such
vivid detailed nightmares?
I really enjoyed this book. I am looking
forward to reading the next books in the series. If you liked Harry
Potter, or Fablehaven, or have an interest in Greek Mythology, you will
love this book! It is clean, has a lot of adventure and is humorous as
well!


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Excellent for children!
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4.0
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4.0
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Perfect for a 9-14 years old public, I think. That’s why I regret not having read it earlier, I would have appreciated much more. I’m not saying I didn’t like it, because I really did enjoy reading it, but it’s not the same as reading this book as a child. The writing is really clear, and you are taken by the action. The plot is good, it felt a little like Harry Potter at some points, some of you certainly have seen it, but it’s not that obvious.

However, I was shocked at the beginning of the book when I read that Percy was 12 years old and in his first year of middle school! I couldn’t stop imagining Logan Lerman who was absolutely not 12 years old in the movie. It changed everything, it’s not the same reading the adventures of a 12-year-old little boy as reading the adventures of a 17-year-old teenager. I really don’t understand why they changed this in the movie. There are quite a lot of changes in this movie, of course the plot is still the same: Percy is accused of having stolen Zeus’s lightning, and he goes to find it with Annabeth and Grover, but there are HUGE differences in the story. I think I preferred the book.

I really love the story, the ideas, the way it is written, the book really easily grabs your attention and you can read it really fast. I loved the chapter’s titles, they made me laugh, here are a few of them: “I Accidentally Vaporize My Pre-Algebra Teacher”, “I Become Supreme Lord of the Bathroom”, etc. It’s nice to have the protagonist telling us the story from his point of view, he always tells us how he feels about the other characters and what’s happening to him with a funny and sarcastic tone, but he’s really young and sometimes he looks naïve, and sometimes stupid (with Medusa, or Crusty). I really appreciate the fact that he doesn’t look like any Greek hero, he’s just a child dragged into this world of Greek Gods and heroes. And it’s good for your general knowledge to learn a little about Greek Gods, and, trust me, Percy will help you to learn all about them.

Seriously, a really good children’s book, and you can still appreciate it as an adult.
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Good Middle School REad
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4.0
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by Pathfinder


This book has a lot of action, good descriptions and it's funny. I love the fact that the hero has ADHD and dyslexia and that the ADHD actually proves to be a good thing for him some of the time (like when fighting monsters). I was worried that if I didn't know a lot about Greek mythology I wouldn't be able to understand a lot of it, but that wasn't a problem at all. I'm already working on the 2nd book in the series.
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shaky beggining for the series
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4.0
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by taylor


this is a book many compare to harry potter but actually there is nothing similar. percy jackson is a son of the great god posideon god of the ocean. he discovers many things aboout him he never even knew exsisited.yes it is good and bad. while he does many dangerous things that rae deadly at leats he has his new friends to help him through it.

i liked this book an di loved this series. i think this book is wonderrfull but the books that follow it are better in my opinion. this is a very good series that is trult exciting
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Promising start to a celebrated series
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4.0
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I'm finally getting around to this series. I found this first book enjoyable enough, and I'll continue reading. I think I would have gobbled this up when I was younger, and I'm glad to see my daughter doing so now. I especially love how the stories expose her so thoroughly to Greek mythology. I've heard that the writing gets better as the series continues, and I look forward to experiencing that. Lastly, I'm very impressed with Riordan's imagination. This was a ripe idea for a series, waiting to be plucked, and Riordan harvested it masterfully. I believe he deserves the success that he enjoys.
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Great for fans of fantasy and mythology
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4.0
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by Kaitlyn

Percy Jackson thinks that he is just a normal kid with dyslexia and ADHD... until his math teacher turns into a monster and tries to kill him. It is shortly after that he discovers he is not a normal kid, but a demigod: son of Poseidon.

I was skeptical about reading this book at first, because I thought it would be too child-like. Finally, though, with the movie coming out, I decided to read it, and I am glad that I did. This book is exciting, funny, and suspenseful. I had a hard time putting it down. The characters are well-rounded and likable, and I really enjoyed learning some mythology in the context of the story.

I think that anyone who enjoys fantasy books or mythology will enjoy this book. The only thing that bothers me about it, and the reason I give it a four, is because I don't really like books in the first person, but that's probably just a personal thing.
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Very Original and Creative
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4.0
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by Carly Morrison

The Lightning Thief is one of my favorite books mostly because of how well it was written. This story is filled with fantasy, adventure and betrayal. It is also just the first book in the series by Rick Riordan. 



This book takes you inside the life of Percy Jackson who is a twelve-year-old boy with dyslexia who tends to get into a lot of trouble. He has jumped from school to school always getting expelled for some unexplainable reason. Percy finally figures out who he truly is when his best friend Grover shows up at the cottage his mom and him are staying at. They are pursued by monsters and almost killed but in the end make it to a Summer Camp that is not as innocent as it looks. Percy meets new friends and makes new enemies at this camp and begins his training, which will hopefully keep him alive and eventually make him into the hero that he was destined to become.


 


Percy is a half blood meaning that one of his parents are a Greek god or Goddess, which is why monsters are attracted to him and why he has to fight to survive. When Percy gets blamed for Zeus' master lightning bolt being stolen from Olympus because of who his father is Percy is given ten days to find it or else a war so great that it might destroy the whole world may begin.


 


I truly loved this book and I never wanted to put it down. It is non-stop adventure and I had to find out what was going to happen to Percy and his friends next. This book is really great and I hope you will read it and absolutely love it just like I did.

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Percy Jackson Makes Reading Fun
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4.0
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4.0
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Reader reviewed by Bobbi's Book Nook





Percy Jackson & The Olympians is a series of adventure books for children written by Rick Riordan, based on Greek mythology. Riordan is the multi-award-winning author of the Tres Navarre mystery series for adults and has become a #1 New York Times bestseller with Percy Jackson. His Percy Jackson series features a twelve-year-old dyslexic boy who discovers he is the modern-day son of a Greek god. The novels draw on Riordans experience teaching Greek mythology and his interaction with students who have learning differences.

The series begins with a young boy named Percy Jackson who discovers that he is the son of Poseidon, the god of the sea. In the process, he learns that the Olympians still exist, along with many other figures and monsters from Greek mythology like Titans, cyclopes, and other creatures. He later becomes the owner of the sword Anaklusmos (which means "Riptide"). This was a gift from his father.

Currently four books have been published thus far in the series, with one more still to come:
The Lightning Thief (2005)
The Sea of Monsters ( 2006)
The Titan's Curse (2007).
The Battle of the Labyrinth ( 2008).

The Lightning Thief
Twelve-year-old Percy Jackson is about to be kicked out of boarding school...again. No matter how hard he tries, he can't seem to stay out of trouble. But can he really be expected to stand by and watch while a bully picks on his scrawny best friend? Or not defend himself against his pre-algebra teacher when she turns into a monster and tries to kill him? Of course, no one believes Percy about the monster incident; he's not even sure he believes himself ... until the Minotaur chases him to summer camp. Suddenly, mythical creatures seem to be walking straight out of the pages of Percy's Greek mythology textbook and into his life. The gods of Mount Olympus, he's coming to realize, are very much alive in the 21st-century. And worse, he's angered a few of them: Zeus's master lightning bolt has been stolen, and Percy is the prime suspect.

Now Percy has just 10 days to find and return Zeus's stolen property, and bring peace to a warring Mount Olympus. On a daring road trip from their summer camp in New York to the gates of the Underworld in Los Angeles, Percy and his friends, one a satyr and the other the demigod daughter of Athena, will face a host of enemies determined to stop them. To succeed in his quest, Percy will have to do more than catch the true thief: he must come to terms with the father who abandoned him; solve the riddle of the Oracle, which warns him of failure and betrayal by a friend; and unravel a treachery more powerful than the gods themselves.

The Sea of Monsters
Percy, Poseidon's 13-year-old demigod son, is desperate to rescue his friend Grover, captive of the bloodthirsty Cyclops Polyphemus, and to retrieve the healing Golden Fleece. The sheepskin is needed to restore the protection around Camp Half-Blood, the only safe haven for the children of gods and humans, heroes-in-training in our modern world. However, the camp has already been compromised and the quest for the Golden Fleece has been awarded to the bully Clarisse. Encouraged by Hermes, Percy sets off for the Bermuda Triangle anyway with his friend Annabeth and classmate Tyson, who turns out to be a half-brother and a Cyclops as well. Adventure follows chaotic adventure at a rapid pace, and readers with even a passing acquaintance with the Odyssey will enjoy this fresh use of familiar stories.

The Titan's Curse
Percy Jackson is now 14, a bit older and wiser, yet still entangled with the Fates. Friends, monsters, dysfunctional gods, and the romantic stirrings of all things natural and mythological are encountered. His good friend, if oft-time rival, Annabeth (daughter of Athena) is missing, as is Artemis, goddess of the hunt. Joined by best buddy Grover-the-goat-boy and an argumentative array of accomplices, Percy sets off to fulfill, and hopefully foil, the foreboding prophecy of the Oracle. Plagued by ominous dreams, thwarted by hideous monsters, and challenged by conflicting partnerships, the search party's success hinges on unlikely unity. The droll pitch is teen-perfect, as when Apollo heats up the scene by arriving in his fire-red Maserati, wearing jeans, a sleeveless T-shirt, and loafers. 'Wow,' Thalia muttered, 'Apollo is hot.' 'He's the sun god,' I said. 'That's not what I meant.' Intricate prophecies and relationships are neatly braided into the adventurous plot.

The Battle of the Labyrinth
Percy and three friends set off on a quest through the treacherous labyrinth, in search of the inventor Daedalus, hoping that he will help them to defeat the army being assembled by Luke, son of Hermes. The thing is - Luke is just the messenger, and the evil he's about to unleash can bring down Olympus itself. Although still clueless about girls and relationships, Percy starts developing and unleashing his powers, and surprises even himself when he attempts to repeat Hercules' great stable cleansing project. Other demi-gods also come into their own in book four, and a mortal girl proves to be just the ticket, and in the nick of time too. In a related sub-story, the search for Pan reaches an exhilarating climax. Packed with monsters of all persuasions, gods and demi-gods, rescues, battles and side trips to Alcatraz and Mount St. Helens, this is by far the most exciting book of the series so far.

If you have children aged 8 to 14, or if you are a child at heart, you will enjoy these enchanting books. Percy Jackson and the Olympians is a rare series of books that not only entertains, but teaches. Teachers and parents alike will be overjoyed to have children reading this wonderful series.
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maybe I'm odd person out???
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3.0
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3.0
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Honestly, was disappointed. So much hype, but that's the problem with hype is you begin to believe it after a while and then the actually book can't live up to the promise. I won't read any of the others.
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