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Mythology, Greek. Fiction.
Poseidon (Greek deity). Fiction.
Animals, Mythical. Fiction.
Gr 6-9-Charlotte, 13, and her cousin Zee return in this fun and witty second book in the trilogy. They have recently been to the Underworld where they defeated Poseidon's evil grandson, Philonecron, from overthrowing Hades. Now Zee is acting odd and has fallen for her best friend, causing a rift in their friendship. Jason, a new guy at school, seems to know more about her than he should. Charlotte's parents have planned for them to go on an "educational" cruise that Charlotte is dreading. Then Jason disappears and Zee's behavior becomes even more bizarre. What begins as an ordinary, if boring, cruise becomes a struggle against Poseidon. He wants revenge on Charlotte for disgracing Phil and making the gods look weak. His plan involves stranding their ship and having sea monster Ketos attack and eat it. Can Charlotte figure out how to defeat Poseidon? The story is told from both Charlotte's and Zee's points of view but it's resourceful Charlotte who dominates. Despite her frequent and sarcastic asides that sometimes slow down the action, readers will root for her as she battles powerful Greek gods and monsters. The many references to events from The Shadow Thieves (S & S, 2005) makes it advantageous to read the books in order. This is the perfect series for fans of Rick Riordan's "Percy Jackson and the Olympians" books (Hyperion/Miramax).-Sharon Rawlins, NJ Library for the Blind and Handicapped, Trenton Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information.
ALA Booklist (Thu Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)After a harrowing trip to the Underworld to thwart Philonecron's plot to overthrow Hades at the expense of living children (The Shadow Thieves, 2007), Charlotte is grounded. The eighth-grader chafes at her punishment and doesn't trust that her again-ordinary life will remain that way for long. She's right. It so happens Philonecron is related to Poseidon, who takes great offense at his kin's comeuppance and plans to make Charlotte pay. Not to be outdone, the defeated Philonecron makes nefarious plans regarding Charlotte's cousin and comrade, Zee. Readers will delight in the cousins' continuing mythological adventures, told here with the same imagination, wit, and rambunctiousness as its predecessor.
Horn Book (Wed Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)Charlotte battled Greek gods in The Shadow Thieves. Now Poseidon wants revenge, and an ill-timed cruise plunges her back into the struggles of mortals against gods. With irreverent narration, this story mixes the wry with the dramatic, winding up to a pitched battle at sea. Close beneath the surface of Charlotte's sulky exterior is a brave and resolute hero.
Kirkus ReviewsIt doesn't seem fair that the reward for saving the world is getting grounded for life, but that's just what's happened to 13-year-old Charlotte. Her parents can't understand where she went when she stopped Philonecron's dastardly plan in The Shadow Thieves (2006), so now they don't trust her. Meanwhile, Philonecron has yet another dastardly plan, this time for revenge. Charlotte seems completely abandoned: Her parents belittle her; her cousin Zee is acting extremely strange; and her world is filled with powerful immortals who are petty, cruel and ridiculously tacky. When Charlotte's parents invite her on a cruise, it seems like her life might be improving, but she's mistaken. Not only is the cruise educational , but unbeknownst to Charlotte, it's been arranged by Poseidon as part of Philonecron's vengeance. Sulky and easily damaged Charlotte's not a typical plucky heroine, but that only adds to her appeal; she doesn't fight evil because she's a destined world-saver, but because she's the only person around who can, and she knows somebody needs to. Not deep, but witty, well-paced and fun. (Fantasy. 9-12)
School Library Journal
ALA Booklist (Thu Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)
Horn Book (Wed Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2007)
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Kirkus Reviews
CHAPTER 1
No Way to Treat a Hero
Once, not so long ago, inside an ordinary middle school in an ordinary city in an ordinary state in the middle of an ordinary country, a small redheaded eighth grader was doing something very ordinary indeed. Charlotte Mielswetzski (Say it with me: Meals-wet-ski. Got it? If not, say it again: Meals. Wet. Ski.) was in the school office calling her mother. And lest you think she was calling her mother for some interesting reason, let me assure you she most certainly was not. For Charlotte could be found in that same office calling her mother every day after school. In fact, five months before, her mother had contacted the Hartnett Middle School principal and asked him to make special arrangements to allow Charlotte to use the office phone, because Charlotte would be needing to call her mother every day and inform her when she was on her way home. You might think that after five months this would have become less embarrassing, but, as Charlotte would behappy to assure you, it had not.
You see, Charlotte Mielswetzski was grounded.Verygrounded. She had to call her parentsrightafter school every day and then walkstraighthome after she called. If her mother was at the office, Charlotte had to call when she got home as well. She was required to use the school and home phones, too, so Mrs. Mielswetzski would know she was calling from the place she was supposed to be. No cell phones.
And Charlotte actually had a cell phone now. For the last two years she had been begging her parents for one, but Mrs. Mielswetzski said it was ridiculous that kids needed cell phones and Mr. Mielswetzski said something about it just getting confiscated anyway (he was a history teacher at the high school and knew whereof he spoke). Charlotte suspected she was the only person in the entire world who didn't have a phone. But, as she soon learned, not having a cell phone is much better than being given a cell phone so your parents can keep track of you at all times. She needed permission to use it for any other reason, and they said they would know if she misused it because they would check the bills every month.
It was almost as if her parents didn't trust her.
The only things Charlotte was allowed to do were school-sanctioned activities, like gymnastics. She had been quite shocked that her mother had let her try out for the team, but, frankly, her mother had seemed even more shocked that Charlotte had wanted to try out at all and perhaps was not thinking clearly. Charlotte was fairly sure that if she'd been doing gymnastics all her life, her mother would have grounded her from that, too -- but since Mrs. Mielswetzski had been trying to get her to do extracurricular activities for years and Charlotte had never had the slightest inclination to do so before, it suddenly must have seemed like a great idea. It's all in the timing.
"Hello, Charlotte," said Mrs. Mielswetzski when she picked up the phone. Her mother used to call her things like "honey," but not anymore. "How was practice?"
"Fine," Charlotte said. It had actually been more than fine. Charlotte had landed a cartwheel on the balance beam for the first time ever, after having tried for weeks. She was so excited she had almost fallen off, which would have made the whole thing a lot less cool-looking. But she didn't fall, and the whole team cheered. And just then, Charlotte Mielswetzski felt like she could probably do a cartwheel anywhere -- on a handrail, on a ribbon, on the whisker of her cat -- and land it with grace and precision.
But she wasn't going to tell her mother any of that. The last thing she wanted to do was give her the satisfaction of thinking that Charlotte had had even a moment of happiness.
"It's a little late," said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
Charlotte winced. "Practice went long. You can call Coach Seltzer!" (If her tone wasn't that kind, you must forgive her; she had been a little irritable the last few months.)
With a sigh, her mother said, "Okay, Charlotte. Just come straight home. Do you want me to pick you up?"
"No!" said Charlotte quickly. The Mielswetzskis lived just six blocks from the campus of Hartnett Middle School, and when it was warm enough, Charlotte walked to and from school every day. But during the winter she'd had to get a ride from her mother, and it was often frostier inside the car than outside. So Charlotte was always quite eager to find other options. "Maddy stayed after to study. I can get a ride with Mrs. Ruby." Maddy, Charlotte'sbest friend, had already called her mother to come get them. Maddy had fallen prey to a lengthy and mysterious illness last October, and since thenher mom had been all too happy to do just about anything for her. You have to work that sort of situation to your advantage.
Her mother paused. "All right, Charlotte," she said finally. "I'll be sure to call Mrs. Ruby and thank her later tonight."
Charlotte's cheeks flushed and she hung up without saying good-bye. Before she'd called her mother, she'd still felt a small glow from her accomplishment today -- just a spark, really, but after the way the last few months had gone, a spark was good enough. But now that spark was gone. All gone.
Charlotte hadn't been lying. Mrs. Ruby was going to pick them up. Lately Maddy had been staying after school and working in the library while Charlotte was at gymnastics. Maddy was always happy to have an excuse to dohomework (unlike Charlotte, who preferred excusesnotto do homework), but really she did it just to get some time with Charlotte, since it was theonly chance they had to see each other.
Maddy watched Charlotte as she glared at the office phone. "Everything okay?" she asked.
"No," replied Charlotte.
Maddy groaned sympathetically. "We should go watch for Mom."
Charlotte nodded, and Maddy led her out of the office door. The schoolreceptionist looked up and smiled at the girls. "Bye, Charlotte," she said. "See you tomorrow!"
Charlotte grunted.
"So," Maddy said when they reached the school vestibule, "your mom hasn't lightened up at all, I see."
"Nope," said Charlotte.
"It just seems kind of extreme," Maddy said for the hundredth time. "So you failed a math test. It happens."
Charlotte cast a look at her friend. Maddy didn't know the truth about why her parents were so mad at her; Charlotte would have loved to have told her the whole story, but then Maddy would think Charlotte was crazy and would lock her in a nuthouse, and that would put a serious damper on their friendship.
The only person who knew the truth was Charlotte's cousin Zee, but he didn't want to be locked up any more than she did. Oh, and her old English teacher Mr. Metos knew, of course. After everything had happened, Charlotte had hoped he would help her with her parents, but talking to people wasn't really Mr. Metos's strong suit.
The thing is, a few months before, in order to save all the sick kids,Charlotte and Zee had had to sneak down to the Underworld -- the Underworldas in the-Greek-mythology Underworld, which is actually real. In fact, as Charlotte learned last fall, much to her surprise, all of Greek myths are real -- Zeus, Poseidon, Hades, the whole bit. It's just that nobody knows it. Hades is the god of the Underworld, and a minor god named Philonecron tried to overthrow him, and to make an army he'd stolen and enchanted kids' shadows. That's why Maddy was sick -- her shadow was taken, along with the shadows of pretty much every kid in the city, not to mention in London, where Zee had lived.
So, sometimes really bad things happen and, for reasons that are rather complicated, you're the only one who can stop them. And sometimes, in order to do so, you have to sneak out of the house late at night to get to the Underworld. And on those occasions, you, because you are a conscientious person, leave your parents a note explaining that you know what's makingeveryone sick and you have to go save the world. Helpfully, you also tell them you love them and not to worry.
The problem is, your parents don't really listen to this last part, and when you finally get back the next morning (extremely weird, because it felt like forever down there, but it turned out to be only one night in the Upperworld) -- after Philonecron tried to throw you in the Styx, a few monsters tried to eat you, you met up with the Lord of the Underworld, and a whole shadow army tried to bring his palace down on your head -- well, you find out that they have, in fact, worried. A lot.
After they call the police to tell them you have returned home safely, and then they hug you a lot and cry for a while, well -- after that, they want to know where you've been. (And, for that matter, why you are covered in weird-looking slime, purple cobwebs, and Harpy poo, and why your cat's leg is broken.) And when you don't tell them, they tend to get pretty upset. And, after a few days, when you still haven't told them, they stick you in therapy. They're going to give you speeches about howdisappointedthey are in you and how family is all abouttrustand how you worried them todeathand you don't have the decency to explain where youwereand they have to assume the worst -- which is that you can't be trusted. And then they ground you. A lot.
Charlotte Mielswetzski had once thought that she could talk her way out of any situation. This was before she came back from the Underworld. She would have liked to come up with something, something to make her parents feel better and to stop her from being grounded until she was thirty-five, but for once in her life, when she opened her mouth, nothing came out.
The thing that gets Charlotte is if she'd never left a note in the first place -- which she did out ofconcernand basic humandecency, mind you -- and had just sneaked out of the house and come back in the morning, she could have told her parents that she'd gone to, like, a party or something (a very muddy, smelly, sooty, gross party), and then her parents would have freaked out and grounded her, but probably for only a month. Or maybe two. And she wouldn't have had to go to therapy.
As for Maddy, Charlotte had just flat-out lied. She was grounded, she told her friend, because she failed the math midterm and was in danger of failing the class. The problem was, Maddy was Charlotte's best friend, and Charlotte had to lie to her about the biggest thing that had ever happened to her. She had to lie to her about the whole world, basically, and what was the point of having a best friend if you couldn't tell her everything? And as they stood in the school lobby watching for Mrs. Ruby, Charlotte thought about what it might be like to tell Maddy the truth, once and for all. She could feel the words form in her mouth -- "Maddy, I have to tell you something" -- but she couldn't say them. There was no way she could say them. So Charlotte just sighed and shook her head. She'd been sighing a lot lately and was probably going to need oxygen at some point.
"How's Zee?" Maddy asked casually.
"Fine," Charlotte replied, just as casually.
Maddy, like every other girl in school, had a crush on Zee. Zee had come over from England last September to live with the Mielswetzskis; his parents sent him over when all the kids in London started getting sick. But a month ago Zee's parents had finally moved to the United States too, and Zee had gone to live with them in a house a mile away from Charlotte's. When Zee hadfirst come over, with his perfect British manners and instant popularityand freakish girl-magnet-ness, Charlotte had wanted him far away. But they'd gone to hell and back together, or at least to Hades, and now he was the only one who knew the things about the world that she did, the only person Charlotte wasn't lying to on a daily basis.
But that didn't mean she wanted Maddy to date him.
"Was practice okay?" Maddy asked, in a come-back-to-the-light-Charlotte kind of voice. "Break anything?"
Charlotte thought again of her cartwheel, of the moment when she soared over the beam, when her legs began to come back to Earth on a perfect line, when she knew she was finally going to land it. Then she thought of her mom's voice saying,I'll be sure to call Mrs. Ruby and thank her.
"Okay," Charlotte shrugged. She felt sorry for Maddy. It must be hard tohave a friend who spoke exclusively in one-word sentences.
"Oh!" Maddy exclaimed. "Listen! Are you guys doing anything for spring break this year?"
Charlotte grunted. "What do you think?" Spring break was less than two weeks away, and it was going to be the same this year as it was every year. Everyone in Charlotte's school went off to some exotic locale every year and came back all happy and tan, while she stayed home and only got paler, which made her freckles even more pronounced.
"Because I was thinking, maybe I could ask Mom if you could come to Florida with us this year."
"What?" Charlotte turned. "Really?"
"Sure! We've got lots of room in the house, and Brian isn't coming. We have his plane ticket -- maybe we could transfer it or something." Brian was Maddy's older brother. Much older. He was in his first year of college andapparently had better things to do than go to Fort Myers with his family. While Charlotte had nothing better at all to do. But...
"They'llneverlet me," Charlotte moaned. "Remember? I can't betrusted?"
Maddy rolled her eyes. "Maybe they will! I mean, hasn't this gone on long enough? You've been so good, too! Look, I'll have my mom call your mom. She can make it sound -- I dunno, educational or something."
Charlotte closed her eyes and saw sandy beaches and sunshine and palm trees and...
Can redheads tan? Charlotte wanted very much to find out.
So it happened that Charlotte arrived at her house in a good mood, the first good mood she'd been in since she had returned from the world of the Dead and gotten Super-Mega-Grounded.
When she walked in the door, though, she found her parents sitting at the kitchen table waiting for her, and her good mood quickly dissipated. Charlotte had lived with her parents long enough to know that whatever this was, it could not be good.
With a loud squawk, her cat Mew came tearing toward her, and Charlotte quickly bent down to scratch her between the ears. Charlotte had a sort of joint custody of Mew with Zee, because when Zee moved in with his parents, Mew got upset and sulked around the house all the time. But now they switched off weeks and Mew was much happier. Charlotte's parents had suggested the arrangement; they were chock-full of good ideas about taking people's cats away from them.
"Welcome home, Charlotte," Mrs. Mielswetzski said.
"Hi, honey," Mr. Mielswetzski said. He, at least, still loved her.
Charlotte braced herself and looked up. "Hi," she said cautiously.
"How was practice?" Mr. Mielswetzski asked.
"Fine," said Charlotte, looking back and forth at their faces. They wereinscrutable.
"Good, good." Her parents exchanged glances.
"Um," Charlotte said, tugging on her hair. "Well, I think I'm going to goupstairs. I've got a lot of homework." With a surreptitious bite of her lip, she moved quickly toward the door.
"Wait!" said Mr. Mielswetzski.
Not quickly enough.
Charlotte squeezed her eyes shut, then picked up Mew for defense. Mew would never let anything bad happen to her.
"Charlotte, we've got some news," said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
"Good news," said Mr. Mielswetzski.
"Really?" Charlotte couldn't help but feel a tinge of hope. Maybe she'd proven she could, in fact, be trusted. Maybe they were going to let her out of prison....
"Well, your father has won an award," said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
Oh. Honestly, if people played with Charlotte's moods anymore today, she was going to actuallyneedher therapy.
"Well, more like a prize," said Mr. Mielswetzski.
"Oh, Mike, it's an award!" said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
"Well, that's very sweet, honey," said Mr. Mielswetzski.
"You absolutely deserve it," said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
"Guys!" said Charlotte.
"Charlotte," said Mr. Mielswetzski, turning toward his daughter, "how would you like to go on a cruise for spring break?"
Charlotte almost dropped Mew. "What?" Mew scowled at her and jumped down onto the floor.
"Well," smiled Mr. Mielswetzski, "the Clio Foundation, a foundation supporting history teachers, has given me a prize -- "
"Anaward," corrected Mrs. Mielswetzski.
" -- a cruise for the whole family during spring break!" Charlotte's eyes bugged out. A cruise! They would go to the Caribbean! Maybe the Bahamas! She would spend the whole time reading on the deck by the pool while cute waiters brought her smoothies! Sure, she'd be stuck with her parents the whole time, but they'd go off exploring, doing lame tourist stuff, and she would just sit in the sun and --
"It's an American History cruise!" said her father. "We'll go to see Mount Vernon and go to Colonial Williamsburg and we'll look at Civil War battlefields!"
"What?" said Charlotte. Clearly she hadn't heard right.
"An American History cruise!" said Mrs. Mielswetzski. "Up the East Coast! Normally, a girl who is grounded doesn't get to go on cruises, but given the educational nature of this one, we thought we'd make an exception."
"Anyway," said Mr. Mielswetzski, "it will give us a lot of time together. As a family."
Her parents exchanged a happy look.
"Oh," Charlotte said. "Um, look, I've got to go to my room now. I'm notfeeling very good."
"Oh!" said Mrs. Mielswetzski.
"Oh!" said Mr. Mielswetzski.
"You go rest!"
"By all means!"
"We can talk about the cruise later."
"Okay," said Charlotte weakly. And with that she walked slowly up to her room to call Maddy, to tell her of the latest cruel twist of fate.
Now, we know Charlotte Mielswetzski was not naive. She was by no means under the impression that she could just waltz down to the Underworld, thwart an evil demigod, chat up an Olympian, and waltz back up again without any repercussions. These things did tend to have repercussions. And since she'd gotten back from the Underworld there had been a part of her that was waiting for something to happen. Something like Philonecron -- who had been banished to the Upperworld -- paying a call, or something like one of the gods -- who really didn't seem that pleased with the idea of mortals traipsing through their realms -- sucking her up to Mount Olympus and turning her into an aardvark. But as the months wore on and nothing happened, as she was confronted with the indignities of middle school and of having parents, Charlotte had begun to relax a little bit. Perhaps that's why she thought nothing of this strange gift falling into their laps so suddenly. Perhaps that's why the only thing that alarmed her about it was the close confinement with her parents and the forced march through Colonial Williamsburg. Perhaps she didn't even register that the organization that was sending them on this trip was called the Clio Foundation, because surely if she did she would have remembered that Clio was the name of the Greek muse of history. And that should have set off alarm bells, because Charlotte Mielswetzski, of all people, should know to beware of Greeks bearing gifts.
Text copyright © 2007 by Anne Ursu
Excerpted from The Siren Song by Anne Ursu
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Inside an ordinary middle school in an ordinary city, a small redheaded eighth grader is doing something very ordinary, indeed.
Ever since Charlotte Mielswetzski and her cousin, Zee, saved the world, life has been rather ordinary. Ordinary, that is, if you call being ultramegagrounded (in Charlotte's case) or treated as if you might fall to pieces (in Zee's case) ordinary. Either way, heroes deserve better.
Of course, no one knows Charlotte and Zee are heroes. It's not like they can simply announce that Greek myths are real or proclaim they have returned from the Underworld, where they rescued all of mankind from Philonecron, a deranged demigod with delusions of grandeur. Instead, they are forced to keep this terrible knowledge to themselves, and are stuck in a state of extraordinary ordinariness.
But things aren't quite as ordinary as they seem. For Philonecron is the grandson of Poseidon, and you don't mess with the progeny of the second most powerful god in the universe. And Philonecron himself isn't so happy about having all of his delicious plans thwarted by mortal children. He wants revenge, and with his grandfather to help him, he is going to get what he wants.
For Charlotte and Zee, their not-so-ordinary lives are about to be disrupted once again. This time it's not the world they must save -- it's themselves.
In the thrilling second installment of the Cronus Chronicles trilogy, author Anne Ursu brings her trademark wit to a spectacular adventure on the high seas.