Showing posts with label Rick Riordan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rick Riordan. Show all posts

Monday, May 18, 2009

The Last Olympian

I finished Rick Riordan's The Last Olympian, book #5 in the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series.  This was billed as the last book in the series and the adventures are finished but ... there were lots of openings at the end for another series based on the same concept.

The series has been leading up to one giant war between the demi-gods and gods against the forces of evil led by Kronos.  I expected that this book would encompass the war and it did.  In fact, most of the book was the war and I didn't expect that.  It was one action sequence after another.  I enjoyed it but would have liked a little less action and a little more character development.  I guess Riordan thought he had developed all of his characters at this point.

There were some clever bits.  The monster Typhon is moving through the country like a terrible storm front (in fact that's what mortals think he is) and at one point he is in St. Louis destroying buildings downtown.  I hope one of them was the Gateway One building, I've never liked it and the Mall would be better without it.

But most of the action takes place in New York and for those of us not up on the geography of Manhattan some of the descriptions didn't mean much (although Riordan or his editors did think to include a map, which was helpful).  In fact reading this book is a little like hanging out with a Yankees fan for an extended period.   By the end I wasn't really all that upset that New York was trashed. 

There were a few twists in the story that were good and the ending was satisfying.  I'm not a kid so I don't know how it would go over with kids.  I had a good discussion about the series with my 13 year old cousin Andrew last week but he hadn't read the new book yet.   When he does ... we can compare notes.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Happy Birthday, You Beautiful Catenary Curve

On October 28, 1965, the Gateway Arch, a part of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial, was completed. I was 5 years old.

One of my earliest memories is being downtown with my dad, standing on the parking lot of the Old Cathedral, looking at the Arch under construction. I remember it clearly but I don't know what year it was. 1964, probably.

There are a lot of misconceptions about the Arch. Some people think that it straddles the Mississippi. It doesn't. It stands on the west bank, the Gateway to the West.

Recently I was reading The Lightening Thief, the first of Rick Riordan's wonderful series for young people in which the gods of Ancient Greece live among us today, still wreaking havoc on mortals. The 6th grade hero Percy (short for Perseus) is threatened by a mythical creature while he visits the observation deck at the top of the Arch. The monster blows a hole in the side of the Arch - no small feat since the Arch is constructed of double-walled sections of carbon steel on the interior and stainless steel on the exterior held together by welded high strength steel rods, with the interior space filled with concrete. In any event, Percy has only seconds to figure out how to escape the monster.

I glanced at the park ranger and his family. The little boy was hiding behind his father's legs. I had to protect these people. I couldn't just ... die. I tried to think, but my whole body was on fire. My head felt dizzy. I had no sword. I was facing a massive fire breathing monster and its mother. And I was scared.

There was no place left to go, so I stepped to the edge of the hole. Far, far below, the river glittered.


Of course he jumps into the river and escapes the monster.

What a great scene! Except of course that he wouldn't have reached the river unless he could fly - which he couldn't. So if anyone actually tried that trick they would end up smashed on the grass below. The Arch stands on the banks of the Mississippi, but not right at the water's edge. It is on an elevated piece of ground overlooking the River, the distance of about 1/2 a city block from the water's edge. But for those who don't know the Arch it was a great scene.

Sometimes people make fun of the Arch. They call St. Louis the Wicket City - because the Arch looks like a giant croquet wicket. Someone once proposed that Illinois build a giant croquet ball on the east bank of the Mississippi. But they didn't. Maybe because Cargill wouldn't sell them the ground under their giant grain elevators.

I love the Arch. I love watching it under different lights and, before they figured out how to light it at night, I liked when it was lit only by moonlight. Or lit by the fireworks at the riverfront on the Fourth of July.

As a child watching the construction I had no idea of the bravery of the men who, in the days before safety harnesses were standard gear, gave tangible form to Aero Saarinen's vision. For those who've never seen anything about the design and construction of the Arch, here's a video about it. Imagine yourself standing in the shoes of those iron workers.



Finally, for those who have never been up in the Arch, here's a video I found that shows what it is like at the observation deck at the top and even shows the little pod shaped cars that transport you to the top. Don't worry - there weren't any fire-breathing monsters up there the day this was filmed.

Middlemarch by George Eliot

Middlemarch, A Study of Provincial Life by George Eliot is one of those classics of English Literature that show up on most "you must r...