Percy Jackson, tome 4 : La bataille du labyrinthe

, #4

French language

Published Sept. 22, 2010 by Albin Michel.

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5 stars (6 reviews)

Le grand combat va commencer... La vie de Percy est menacée. L'armée de Cronos s'apprête à attaquer la Colonie des Sang-Mêlé, en empruntant le Labyrinthe de Dédale. Percy et ses amis doivent trouver Dédale avant Cronos et tout faire pour lui barrer la route. Mais circuler dans l'enfer souterrain n'est pas aisé... surtout quand le chemin est parsemé d'effroyables pièges

36 editions

reviewed The Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson and the Olympians ; bk. 4)

A Labyrinth of Secrets

5 stars

Percy Jackson and his friends have returned and this time they will need to prevent war from breaking out between the Gods and the Kronos, who is using a massive maze designed by an ancient Greek inventor. The massive maze has entrances all over the world and rumor has it that Kronos, the great Titan lord, has plans to use it to invade Olympus.

Percy, along with Annabeth Chase, Grover Underwood, and new ally Rachel Elizabeth Dare, must navigate through the twisty Labyrinth, facing numerous challenges and dangerous creatures, to find Kronos's plan and prevent the imminent war. Along the way, they encounter various Greek mythological beings, including the Sphinx, Hercules, and the Titan, Atlas.

As the group goes deeper into the Labyrinth, they face several personal challenges, including love triangles, parental issues, and internal conflicts. The book also expands on the conflicts between the gods and their children, as …

reviewed The Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan (Percy Jackson & the Olympians ; #4)

Review of 'The Battle of the Labyrinth' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This story moves at an outrageous clip. It’s difficult to put down.

Nico is a major player in this book, and he begins to come into his own toward the end. The realization that his parentage means he’ll always be lonely is sad, but he seems to start to own it. I’m interested in his story, where he’ll go and what he’s been doing while he’s been on his own during these stories.

Aphrodite’s influence on Percy’s life becomes dramatically clear to everyone except Percy in this book. It’s funny because Percy recognizes some tension within his friendships with Annabeth and Rachel, and he suspects the cause, but like every teenager ever, he has no idea how to handle it.

I love Riordan’s concept of the Labyrinth, the idea that it is essentially a metaphysical maze that can literally take a person anywhere if they can get through the mist. …

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