Thursday, September 29, 2011

Sunny sez: "The Romans are coming!"

In honor of the impending release of The Son of Neptune, we bought our dog Sunny her very own ride-along charioteer. As you can see, she's really excited about it.

Sunny also wants to be sure you know about my pre-pub party events this weekend.

Saturday, I'll be at Greeley Square in Manhattan from 1-4PM. We'll have seven gods on hand to entertain you plus tons of giveaways. Costumes are welcome, and we'll have a contest for the best ones, or you can stop by the wrap-your-own-toga station. There will be an exclusive reading from The Son of Neptune (a section that has never been shared before) and the folks from Disney will be giving out 250 bracelets for a signing line, first come first serve. Can you get an early copy of Son of Neptune? Nope. It still comes out on Tuesday, 10/4. However, if you score a bracelet, you can get one of your own books from home signed, or you can get a bookplate signed so you can put it in your copy of SoN when it arrives. Even if you don't get a bracelet, there will be goodies to win and stuff to do, so come on by and say hello! More details for the NYC event here.

After NYC, I'll be flying straight across the country for a second pre-pub event Sunday at The Grove in Los Angeles from 1-4PM. The LA event will have all the same stuff described above, plus you'll be able to buy books for the signing line from the Grove Barnes & Noble store and place pre-orders for The Son of Neptune. AND we'll have a special guest appearance by Disney Channel star Vincent Martella, the voice of Phineas from Phineas and Ferb. More details for the LA event here.

Starting Tuesday, the Olympian Week tour begins! I'll be visiting seven cities in seven days. Can't wait! For full details, check the Olympian Week website.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Meet Hazel Levesque, Demigod

Time for our last character reveal! A week from today, The Son of Neptune is published -- wow, I can't believe the date is almost here at last.

Meet Hazel, a girl with a complicated past. Demigod? Yes. Is that horse important? You bet. Hazel has powers you have never seen before, because her godly parent is on the Roman side. But (major hint) she is related to a character you know well from the Percy Jackson series.Which one? I think that will surprise you.

I hope you all enjoy the book when it's published next week, and if I'm coming to a city near you, I hope to see you! Remember to check tour details at olympianweek.com

Tuesday, September 20, 2011

Meet Death . . . in a good way


Time for our Tuesday character reveal!

You will meet many gods in The Son of Neptune, but here's a fellow most mortals would prefer not to meet: Thanatos, the god of death. What part will he play, and what's up with those chains? For that, you will have to wait for the book. However, if you'd like to read up on Thanatos, I'd recommend one of my favorite online resources for Greek mythology: theoi.com.

Two more weeks until The Son of Neptune, and stay tuned for one more character reveal next Tuesday!

Remember, tour details can be found at olympianweek.com.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

Rick's Recent Reads for September


Taking a short break from writing to let you know what I’ve been reading lately. As usual, it’s been quite a mix of fiction and nonfiction, adult and children’s.

Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children, by Ransom Riggs. This book has been getting a lot of well-deserved attention for the way it incorporates unusual antique photographs into the narrative. The premise: Jacob grew up on his grandfather’s stories about his own childhood during World War II. Supposedly his grandfather escaped the Holocaust by taking refuge on a Welsh island, at an orphanage that catered to children with strange powers. The grandfather even has photos to prove it. As Jacob grows up, he loses faith in his grandfather, and assumes the stories were fantasies, the photos faked. But when a horrible, inexplicable tragedy occurs, Jacob has to reevaluate. Could those stories have been real? Could this island refuge still exist so many years later?  And is it possible his grandfather’s paranoia about ‘monsters’ wasn’t just paranoia? Even without the photos, this would be a gripping story, but the photos add an irresistible element of mystery. The first-person narration is authentic, funny, and poignant. I’m looking forward to the next volume in the series!

Sandman Slim, by Richard Kadry. Okay, this is NOT a children’s book, just FYI. This is noir urban fantasy, like Jim Butcher’s Harry Dresden series, but even grittier. The main character, James Stark, aka Sandman Slim, is betrayed by a group of powerful magicians and dragged bodily into Hell, where he spends eleven years fighting in the gladiator pits of Lucifer. Somehow he survives, and eventually manages to escape back to Los Angeles. Now he’s looking for the people who betrayed him, but to get revenge, he’ll have to navigate a world of angels, demons, vampires, magicians, and plenty of ruthless mortals with lots of secrets to hide. This is a rock ‘em sock ‘em adventure narrated in fresh, crackling hardboiled prose, with plenty of dark humor. I liked it so much I immediately bought the sequel, Kill the Dead. But again, this is very adult stuff. Not a YA fantasy.

Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, by Timothy Snyder. After our trip through the Baltic this summer, Snyder’s historical account of the mass killings in Eastern Europe had a big impact on me. I’ve now seen a lot of the places he talks about: Gdansk, Poland; Tallinn, Estonia; Riga, Latvia; St. Petersburg, Russia. While the atrocities of Stalin and Hitler aren’t exactly news, the sheer numbers involved and the scope of the destruction are truly staggering. I didn’t know much about Stalin’s starvation policies, or the impossibly complicated situation of Poland and the Baltic states in the 1930s as they were trapped between two despots who were so alike, and yet so diametrically opposed. Synder makes a compelling case, comparing and contrasting Hitler and Stalin’s methods. This book is very bleak reading. I had to take long breaks from it to clear my head. But if you’re interested in this period of history, and want a case study of just how absolutely power can corrupt, and just how horrible humans can be to each other, this book is an excellent choice.

Carte Blache, by Jeffery Deaver. This is the newest reincarnation of James Bond, and I was interested in seeing how Deaver would reinvent 007 as a 21st Century British operative. I’ll admit I’m not an avid James Bond fan, though I liked Sean Connery in Dr. No, and I’ve read Ian Fleming’s Casino Royale. I was impressed with Deaver’s interpretation. He stayed true to the spirit of Bond, but added his own impeccable plotting, which frankly made a lot more sense than many of the Bond movies. All in all, Deaver successfully transplanted Bond into 2011. The narrative twists are many and suitably surprising. The villains are well drawn, equally creepy, compelling and competent. Bond comes across as very human, admirable and somewhat tragic. While there is no shortage of romance with the usual ‘Bond girls’ with ridiculous names – Felicity Willing, Philly Maidenstone – there is nothing ‘throw away’ or glibly macho about Bond’s emotional life. This is a three-dimensional James Bond whom I would love to follow in further adventures.

And finally, a few recommendations from my sons:

Patrick, 13, gives two thumbs up to Michael Grant’s Gone series. There are four books so far in the series, with the next coming out in the spring of 2012. Patrick says he loves this series because it is both fantasy and realistic. When all the adults in a coastal California town disappear, the young people at first rejoice. They eat all the candy they want, do whatever they want, and basically live a twenty-four/seven party. Then they realize their town is shut off from the rest of the world for reasons they don’t understand. The food starts running out. And their paradise turns into purgatory.

Patrick also recommends Torn, the newest installment in Margaret Peterson Haddix’s Missing series. This is an adventure series about children who are torn out of different periods of time and thrown together to face a common enemy – though the enemy isn’t clear at first. Patrick likes the pacing and says the time travel element is very well done.

Haley, who just turned 17 – yikes, that’s hard to believe! – recommends the latest in the Skulduggery Pleasant series by Derek Landy. Deathbringer is not out yet in the US (tsk, tsk, US market for lagging behind on such a brilliant series) but we got the UK version and Haley says it’s every bit as good as the previous installments. If you haven’t yet checked these books out, do so. Great fast-paced fantasy with humor and a wisecracking skeleton detective who throws fireballs and drives a Bentley -- what’s not to love?

Haley also loved Bruiser and Everfound by Neal Shusterman, one of his all-time favorite authors. Bruiser is an excellent standalone novel. Everfound is the third book in Shusterman’s Skinjackers series, so be sure to pick up the first, Everlost, if you haven’t yet. It’s a trilogy about children who are stuck between the worlds of the living and the dead. Well, it’s much cooler and more complicated than just that, but you’ll see what I mean when you dive into them.

Happy reading, everyone!

Friday, September 16, 2011

Demigods in Czech (and Slovak)







Thanks to my publisher Fragment in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, who sent these photos of Percy Jackson displays in bookstore windows. They recently published Battle of the Labyrinth, and The Last Olympian will be published there in September.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Guess What Just Arrived . . .


Hot off the presses, the first copies of Son of Neptune arrived on my doorstep just moments ago. This is my favorite part of publishing -- seeing the final product at long last, and it looks great! This means the books will soon be boxed and ready for shipping, so they can arrive to booksellers in time for the October 4 publication date. Until then, it's mine, precious. All mine!

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Meet Ella the Harpy


Time for another character reveal, courtesy of Disney-Hyperion's Heroes of Olympus site! This week we meet Ella, a very special harpy who might hold some valuable secrets. But what secrets, and will she be willing to share them?

You don't have to wait much longer to find out. The Son of Neptune will be released three weeks from today, October 4!

Sunday, September 11, 2011

Two More October Events



In addition to the seven events of Olympian Week, Oct. 4-10 (details here) I'm pleased to announce that I'll be visiting Atlanta to receive the Milner Award on Oct. 27, and visiting the Rogers Public Library Foundation in Rogers, Arkansas on Oct. 29.

I'm honored to receive the Milner Award and visit all the great young readers in Atlanta. It's always a pleasure to go there. The event is open to school groups, with priority given to those who participated in the voting. For full details, contact the sponsors.

The Arkansas event for the Rogers Public Library Foundation is open to the public. Tickets can be reserved online, and again, contact the sponsors for more information.

I hope to see some of you at these events!

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

Meet Octavian

Tuesday again, and time for another character reveal from The Son of Neptune! Meet Octavian and his unfortunate collection of stuffed animal friends. What Octavian's story? You can get some hints at the Heroes of Olympus website, but only time will tell if he's friend or foe, and what part he will play.

The good news: only four more weeks until the book is released!