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Todo el mundo sabe que no hay que meterse con Zeus, pero su hijo Apolo consigue sacarle de sus casillas. Para castigarle, el Dios del trueno decide mandarlo a la tierra bajo la apariencia de Lester, un adolescente granujiento y sin poderes, claro.
Ahora el único modo que tiene Apolo de regresar al monte Olimpo es devolviendo la luz a las profecías de los oráculos que se han oscurecido. Pero ¿qué puede hacer Apolo sin sus poderes? Tras superar una serie de pruebas peligrosísimas (y para qué engañarse, bastante humillantes) en el Campamento Mestizo, se embarcará en un viaje a través de Estados Unidos para conseguir localizar a todos los oráculos. Por suerte, todo lo que ha perdido en poderes lo ha ganado en amistades... así que no va a tener que hacerlo todo solo.
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Previews available in: English Spanish French
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Showing 6 featured editions. View all 28 editions?
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La profecía oscura: Las pruebas de Apolo
2017-10, Montena
Hardcover
in Spanish
8490438374 9788490438374
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Les travaux d'Apollon: La prophétie des ténèbres
2017-10, Wiz/Albin Michel
in French
2226392513 9782226392510
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Go west. Capture Apollo before he can find the next oracle.
If you cannot bring him to me alive, kill him.
Those were the orders my old enemy Nero had given to Meg McCaffrey. But why would an ancient Roman emperor zero in on Indianapolis? And now that I have made it here (still in the embarrassing form of Lester Papadopoulos), where is Meg?
Meg, my demigod master, is a cantankerous street urchin. She betrayed me to Nero back at Camp Half-Blood. And while I'm mortal, she can order me to do anything . . . even kill myself. Despite all this, if I have a chance of prying her away from her villainous stepfather, I have to try.
But I'm new at this heroic-quest business, and my father, Zeus, stripped me of all my godly powers. Oh, the indignities and pain I have already suffered! Untold humiliation, impossible time limits, life-threatening danger . . . Shouldn't there be a reward at the end of each completed task? Not just more deadly quests?
I vow that if I ever regain my godhood, I will never again send a poor mortal on a quest. Unless it is really important. And unless I am sure the mortal can handle it. And unless I am pressed for time . . . or I really just don't feel like doing it myself. I will be much kinder and more generous than everyone is being to me—especially that sorceress Calypso. What does Leo see in her, anyway?






