Rick Riordan is the best-selling Автор of Percy Jackson and the Olympians and The Kane Chronicles, as well as the Tres Navarre mysteries for adults. His latest series, The Герои of Olympus, is a sequel to the Percy Jackson Книги told from the perspectives of seven different demigods. The Mark of Athena, the third book in The Герои of Olympus series, brings together the characters from the first two installments — The Остаться в живых Hero and The Son of Neptune — on a quest to defeat the earth mother Gaea. The best part? Annabeth, who’s been around since the days of The Lightning Thief, will finally get her say. Riordan took the time to speak with EW about his newest book — and why his wife and kids are his best editors. When you’re done Чтение the interview, check out the exclusive book trailer for The Mark of Athena below.
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: My dad told me to tell Ты that Ты have big kids among your Фаны too. He wants to know if there will be another Tres Navarre novel.
RICK RIORDAN: [Laughs] Ты know it’s not anywhere in the near future because the kids Книги are keeping me so busy. I Любовь [the Tres Navarre series], so not anytime soon, but never say never.
Why did Ты turn to children’s literature? What drew Ты to it?
Well, I was a middle-school teacher for many years. My students knew me as a storyteller. I would do mythology tales in the class and they would always say, “Mr. Riordan, Ты should be a writer.” I would always put them off and say, “No, no, I already write for adults.” It took me a while to figure out my students were right. It really is the audience I know best. What really triggered it for me was when my older son Haley was having trouble in school. The Percy Jackson story was something I told him as a bedtime story. That’s where the series came from.
What’s the difference between Письмо for kids and Письмо for adults? Is there a difference?
Most of the tool kit is the same. Kids, if anything, are harder to write for because they are a еще discerning audience. They will not stay with Ты if Ты go off on a tangent или if Ты give them extraneous information that doesn’t serve the story. Ты really have to tell a tight story. Ты have to give them humor and suspense and believable characters. All those things that adults want too, but Ты have to be really on your game when you’re Письмо for kids.
How does The Герои of Olympus compare to the Percy Jackson series?
The main change there was that I decided to do a Roman take on classical mythology and play with the idea, “What if there were two camps — a Greek camp and a Roman camp?” The interaction between those two branches of classical mythology is really at сердце of The Герои of Olympus. It is nice to explore that world from multiple perspectives and really get inside the head of seven main characters rather than just Percy. It let me reinvent my own world, which kept me interested and hopefully kept the readers interested too.
What was it like to switch into third-person narration, particularly for a character you’d written from the first perspective before?
It was a tricky thing to do. I was worried about it, but after I got into it, I found that I could maintain [Percy's] voice, but just do it as a third person narration. It worked out fine.
Can Ты talk a bit about the mythology behind The Герои of Olympus series? Ты unite Roman and Greek mythology in an interesting way…
My biggest challenge was keeping all the names straight for the reader. I have to say the kids seem to have no trouble with that at all. It’s usually the adults who I lose. The kids are in the zone. They know this stuff and I have to really keep on вверх of this because if I do make a mistake или make a reference that’s wrong, they’ll catch me. They’re very perceptive about everything mythology.
The Mark of Athena is where we’ll see the stories of The Остаться в живых Hero and The Son of Neptune come together. Was it hard to keep track of everyone?
The scope of the book is huge. My biggest challenge is to take all the different strands, all the things I’ve set up, and merge them into one huge stage. That was the biggest challenge, but I have to say it was also the biggest treat. Some of the relationships that came out of the book, I was not at all expecting. I just hadn’t really considered all the different permutations. I’m really pleased with how it came out.
What can Ты tell us about The Mark of Athena?
The difference with The Mark of Athena — other than just the fact that it’s got all of the characters together — is that it’s truly Annabeth’s story. This is a character that we’ve known since The Lightning Thief, but we’ve never been inside her head before. The Mark of Athena is really her story. There’s a lot going on, but at the сердце it’s about Annabeth figuring out what her stirrings are, what her mother Athena needs from her, and how she can come to terms with her destiny.
I’ve read that Ты use your wife and kids as sounding boards. What’s that process like exactly?
My wife has been my best editor since I started Письмо Книги with the adult mysteries back in 1997. She doesn’t pull any punches. I really appreciate that I have someone to be very honest with me. My kids are very much the same way. Haley is sort of aging out of my target ages — he’s 18 now — but he is an incredible editor. Patrick, my younger son, is 14, and he’s just a fabulous copy editor. We had to put him on the payroll.
He makes his allowance from copy-editing?
It started as a joke. I had copy-edited The Son of Neptune and the copy editor at Дисней had and my editor had, so three professional people in the Письмо business had looked at it already. [Patrick] said, “Well, if I look at it for mistakes, will Ты pay me 10 dollars a mistake?” I sort of laughed and said, “Yeah sure.” I figured there were not going to be any in there. He found 40 mistakes that all three of us had missed. The kid’s going to put himself through college being a copy editor. [Laughs]
My introduction to your Книги came when my mother bought The Lightning Thief out of sheer desperation to get my brother to read something. I feel like your Книги are a good choice for children who may be reluctant readers. Why do Ты think that is?
That’s great to hear. Every time I hear that, I feel validated. My older son, he was a reluctant reader. I was a reluctant reader as a kid. I worked in the classroom with tons of reluctant readers and they are the ones that I was always trying to reach. Anybody can reach the kid in the front row who’s the A-plus student who reads anyway. Ты really earn your keep as a teacher if Ты can reach the kid who’s trying to hide in the back row and never found a book that he или she really enjoys and reads for pleasure. If Ты can find something that really engages that kid then you’ve done your job.
What Совет do Ты have for parents with children who are reluctant to read?
First, model reading. If the adults in the family are too busy to read, the kids are going to feel the same way. So it’s really important [for the kids] to see their parents reading. The секунда thing is just to provide a quiet time during the evening или sometime that the kids can read. It doesn’t really matter what they’re Чтение as long as the expectation is there that this is the time that we’re going to set aside to let Чтение happen. [Finally], listen to your kid about what their interests are and let them have an active role in picking what it is that they’re going to read.
A Different Interview...
What was your Избранное book as a child?
Fletcher and Zenobia, by Edward Gorey. Out of print now, but a wonderful mixture of fantasy, '60s psychedelia, and Gorey's macabre sense of humor.
Is there a book you've read over and over again?[b/]
The Lord of the Rings is the series that turned me into a reader and got me interested in Фэнтези and mythology. I've probably read it 14 или 15 times.
[b]Who's the fictional character Ты most identify with?
Of my own characters, Grover the Satyr. In a battle, I would not be in the front line with a sword like Percy Jackson. I would be hiding in a куст, буш like Grover, whimpering, ''Don't kill me!'' Fictional characters from other books: I've always had a soft spot for Pip in Great Expectations. That poor kid gets a raw deal, but he makes the best of it.
What book would Ты use to squash a bug?
I'd never use a book to squash a bug. I'd grab a magazine. They make much better swatters.
Is there a book you've faked reading?
Every book I was ever assigned in high school. Of course later I became an English major in college and had to go back and read them all. Then I became an English teacher, so there was definitely some karmic punishment going on.
What book changed your life?
Aside from the aforementioned Lord of the Rings, I'd have to say Robert B. Parker's A Savage Place. That was the first private-eye novel I ever read, and it opened up the whole genre for me, from Raymond Chandler to Robert Crais. Percy Jackson's narrative voice was shaped a great deal by the wisecracking PIs of noir fiction.
Is there a book Ты wish Ты could once again experience for the first time?
Charlotte's Web, but I fear I'd have to be a child again to really appreciate it on a first read. I still remember the sense of wonder it evoked. ''Some Pig!''
link
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: My dad told me to tell Ты that Ты have big kids among your Фаны too. He wants to know if there will be another Tres Navarre novel.
RICK RIORDAN: [Laughs] Ты know it’s not anywhere in the near future because the kids Книги are keeping me so busy. I Любовь [the Tres Navarre series], so not anytime soon, but never say never.
Why did Ты turn to children’s literature? What drew Ты to it?
Well, I was a middle-school teacher for many years. My students knew me as a storyteller. I would do mythology tales in the class and they would always say, “Mr. Riordan, Ты should be a writer.” I would always put them off and say, “No, no, I already write for adults.” It took me a while to figure out my students were right. It really is the audience I know best. What really triggered it for me was when my older son Haley was having trouble in school. The Percy Jackson story was something I told him as a bedtime story. That’s where the series came from.
What’s the difference between Письмо for kids and Письмо for adults? Is there a difference?
Most of the tool kit is the same. Kids, if anything, are harder to write for because they are a еще discerning audience. They will not stay with Ты if Ты go off on a tangent или if Ты give them extraneous information that doesn’t serve the story. Ты really have to tell a tight story. Ты have to give them humor and suspense and believable characters. All those things that adults want too, but Ты have to be really on your game when you’re Письмо for kids.
How does The Герои of Olympus compare to the Percy Jackson series?
The main change there was that I decided to do a Roman take on classical mythology and play with the idea, “What if there were two camps — a Greek camp and a Roman camp?” The interaction between those two branches of classical mythology is really at сердце of The Герои of Olympus. It is nice to explore that world from multiple perspectives and really get inside the head of seven main characters rather than just Percy. It let me reinvent my own world, which kept me interested and hopefully kept the readers interested too.
What was it like to switch into third-person narration, particularly for a character you’d written from the first perspective before?
It was a tricky thing to do. I was worried about it, but after I got into it, I found that I could maintain [Percy's] voice, but just do it as a third person narration. It worked out fine.
Can Ты talk a bit about the mythology behind The Герои of Olympus series? Ты unite Roman and Greek mythology in an interesting way…
My biggest challenge was keeping all the names straight for the reader. I have to say the kids seem to have no trouble with that at all. It’s usually the adults who I lose. The kids are in the zone. They know this stuff and I have to really keep on вверх of this because if I do make a mistake или make a reference that’s wrong, they’ll catch me. They’re very perceptive about everything mythology.
The Mark of Athena is where we’ll see the stories of The Остаться в живых Hero and The Son of Neptune come together. Was it hard to keep track of everyone?
The scope of the book is huge. My biggest challenge is to take all the different strands, all the things I’ve set up, and merge them into one huge stage. That was the biggest challenge, but I have to say it was also the biggest treat. Some of the relationships that came out of the book, I was not at all expecting. I just hadn’t really considered all the different permutations. I’m really pleased with how it came out.
What can Ты tell us about The Mark of Athena?
The difference with The Mark of Athena — other than just the fact that it’s got all of the characters together — is that it’s truly Annabeth’s story. This is a character that we’ve known since The Lightning Thief, but we’ve never been inside her head before. The Mark of Athena is really her story. There’s a lot going on, but at the сердце it’s about Annabeth figuring out what her stirrings are, what her mother Athena needs from her, and how she can come to terms with her destiny.
I’ve read that Ты use your wife and kids as sounding boards. What’s that process like exactly?
My wife has been my best editor since I started Письмо Книги with the adult mysteries back in 1997. She doesn’t pull any punches. I really appreciate that I have someone to be very honest with me. My kids are very much the same way. Haley is sort of aging out of my target ages — he’s 18 now — but he is an incredible editor. Patrick, my younger son, is 14, and he’s just a fabulous copy editor. We had to put him on the payroll.
He makes his allowance from copy-editing?
It started as a joke. I had copy-edited The Son of Neptune and the copy editor at Дисней had and my editor had, so three professional people in the Письмо business had looked at it already. [Patrick] said, “Well, if I look at it for mistakes, will Ты pay me 10 dollars a mistake?” I sort of laughed and said, “Yeah sure.” I figured there were not going to be any in there. He found 40 mistakes that all three of us had missed. The kid’s going to put himself through college being a copy editor. [Laughs]
My introduction to your Книги came when my mother bought The Lightning Thief out of sheer desperation to get my brother to read something. I feel like your Книги are a good choice for children who may be reluctant readers. Why do Ты think that is?
That’s great to hear. Every time I hear that, I feel validated. My older son, he was a reluctant reader. I was a reluctant reader as a kid. I worked in the classroom with tons of reluctant readers and they are the ones that I was always trying to reach. Anybody can reach the kid in the front row who’s the A-plus student who reads anyway. Ты really earn your keep as a teacher if Ты can reach the kid who’s trying to hide in the back row and never found a book that he или she really enjoys and reads for pleasure. If Ты can find something that really engages that kid then you’ve done your job.
What Совет do Ты have for parents with children who are reluctant to read?
First, model reading. If the adults in the family are too busy to read, the kids are going to feel the same way. So it’s really important [for the kids] to see their parents reading. The секунда thing is just to provide a quiet time during the evening или sometime that the kids can read. It doesn’t really matter what they’re Чтение as long as the expectation is there that this is the time that we’re going to set aside to let Чтение happen. [Finally], listen to your kid about what their interests are and let them have an active role in picking what it is that they’re going to read.
A Different Interview...
What was your Избранное book as a child?
Fletcher and Zenobia, by Edward Gorey. Out of print now, but a wonderful mixture of fantasy, '60s psychedelia, and Gorey's macabre sense of humor.
Is there a book you've read over and over again?[b/]
The Lord of the Rings is the series that turned me into a reader and got me interested in Фэнтези and mythology. I've probably read it 14 или 15 times.
[b]Who's the fictional character Ты most identify with?
Of my own characters, Grover the Satyr. In a battle, I would not be in the front line with a sword like Percy Jackson. I would be hiding in a куст, буш like Grover, whimpering, ''Don't kill me!'' Fictional characters from other books: I've always had a soft spot for Pip in Great Expectations. That poor kid gets a raw deal, but he makes the best of it.
What book would Ты use to squash a bug?
I'd never use a book to squash a bug. I'd grab a magazine. They make much better swatters.
Is there a book you've faked reading?
Every book I was ever assigned in high school. Of course later I became an English major in college and had to go back and read them all. Then I became an English teacher, so there was definitely some karmic punishment going on.
What book changed your life?
Aside from the aforementioned Lord of the Rings, I'd have to say Robert B. Parker's A Savage Place. That was the first private-eye novel I ever read, and it opened up the whole genre for me, from Raymond Chandler to Robert Crais. Percy Jackson's narrative voice was shaped a great deal by the wisecracking PIs of noir fiction.
Is there a book Ты wish Ты could once again experience for the first time?
Charlotte's Web, but I fear I'd have to be a child again to really appreciate it on a first read. I still remember the sense of wonder it evoked. ''Some Pig!''
link
OMG GUISE THIS IS THE FULL Предварительный просмотр OF THE DEMIGOD DIARIES
Annabeth and I were relaxing on the great lawn in Central park when she ambushed me with a question.
"You forgot, didn't you?"
I went into red alert mode. It's easy to panic when you're a new boyfriend. Sure, I'd fought monsters with Annabeth for years. Together we'd face the wrath of the gods. We'd battled Titans and calmly faced death a dozen times. But now that we were dating, one frown from her and I freaked. What had I done wrong?
I mentally reviewed the picnic list: Comfy Blankets? Check. Annabeth's favourite пицца with extra olives? Check. Шоколад toffee from La Maison du Chocolat? Check.Weapons in case of a sudden greek mythological apocalypse?
So what had I forgotten?
I was tempted (briefly) to bluff my way through. Two things stopped me. First, I didn't want to lie to Annabeth. Second, she was too smart. She'd see right through me.
Annabeth and I were relaxing on the great lawn in Central park when she ambushed me with a question.
"You forgot, didn't you?"
I went into red alert mode. It's easy to panic when you're a new boyfriend. Sure, I'd fought monsters with Annabeth for years. Together we'd face the wrath of the gods. We'd battled Titans and calmly faced death a dozen times. But now that we were dating, one frown from her and I freaked. What had I done wrong?
I mentally reviewed the picnic list: Comfy Blankets? Check. Annabeth's favourite пицца with extra olives? Check. Шоколад toffee from La Maison du Chocolat? Check.Weapons in case of a sudden greek mythological apocalypse?
So what had I forgotten?
I was tempted (briefly) to bluff my way through. Two things stopped me. First, I didn't want to lie to Annabeth. Second, she was too smart. She'd see right through me.
This is just the regular,you know,I'm crazy about HOO,and this is my first fanfic.Please review!
Reyna Torious-Daughter of Mars
Hazel Levesque-Daughter of Ceres
Percy Jackson-Son of Poseidon
Frank Zhang-Son of Apollo
Jason Grace-Son of Jupiter
Piper McLean-Daughter of Aphrodite
Leo Valdez-Son of Hephaestus
Annabeth Chase-Daughter of Athena
Gwendolyn Cerridise-Daughter of Venus
Ella-A Harpy
Octavian-Son of Minerva
Bobby Minasque-Son of Trivia
Dakota Widows-Daughter of Pluto
Emily Popularity-Daughter of Jupiter
Amanda Cerena-Daughter of Venus
Caitlin Peters-Daughter of Trivia
Clive Demanste-Son of Apollo
Reyna Torious-Daughter of Mars
Hazel Levesque-Daughter of Ceres
Percy Jackson-Son of Poseidon
Frank Zhang-Son of Apollo
Jason Grace-Son of Jupiter
Piper McLean-Daughter of Aphrodite
Leo Valdez-Son of Hephaestus
Annabeth Chase-Daughter of Athena
Gwendolyn Cerridise-Daughter of Venus
Ella-A Harpy
Octavian-Son of Minerva
Bobby Minasque-Son of Trivia
Dakota Widows-Daughter of Pluto
Emily Popularity-Daughter of Jupiter
Amanda Cerena-Daughter of Venus
Caitlin Peters-Daughter of Trivia
Clive Demanste-Son of Apollo