![]() For those who haven't yet read Percy Jackson and the Olympians, the end encourages you to hurry up and read them already so you'll be prepared for the next book in this series (more prepared than Percy with his amnesia, anyway). ![]() The end also, though, cleverly points not just forward, but backward. But it's also part of Riordan's plot to send you on to the next book, The Son of Neptune in which (spoiler alert) we learn about what happened to Percy. It's all part of Hera's plot to unite Greek and Roman demigods. Right at the end, the characters figure out that, if Jason was given amnesia by the gods and sent to the Greek demigod camp, then Percy must have been given amnesia and sent to the Roman demigod camp. Percy has been missing for most of the book (see our "What's Up With the Title?" section). ![]() Specifically, the last paragraphs of the book are about Percy Jackson, the hero of Riordan's first series, Percy Jackson and the Olympians. The conclusion of the book doesn't wrap up the plot or themes, but instead points onward to more plot, more themes, and more pages. ![]()
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