Amelia, Victor, Vanity, Quentin, and Colin, five teenagers who each come from different paradigms of Chaos, can no longer run from the gods who raised them as captives. Now their battle for freedom begins in earnest... until they find the enemy not quite what they had thought. Released as bait to tease out Lamia, the teens get a chance to explore the extent of their powers. But they want more than the taste of freedom. They just have to figure out how to get free and stay free without renewing the war between the gods and Chaos or falling to one of the factions within the gods.
From California to Mars and back again, Titans of Chaos provides one crazy ride. It continues to have all the humor of the previous volumes, but the action now shoots up in spades. Of course, there's still time for dinner at a fancy restaurant, as well as the late-night shopping trip that literally ends in disaster. As with previous volumes, Amelia narrates, but there's still a lot of talking going on between the five, so it's easy to stay informed of everyone else's motives as well.
I love the small bits of wisdom scattered throughout the book, often where I'd least expect it. About Vanity: "And anyone can afford to be silly when she is a prisoner, or a child, not in control of her own life, making no decisions that matter to anyone. That is what she used to be. Helpless and therefore silly. Me, too, I guess." And it's true. Vanity grew up. Even Colin went a few steps higher in my opinion, though he's still as perverted as he used to be. Colin proves again and again that despite his attitude, he cares deeply about the group and will do everything in his power to fight.
But there were a few things that bothered me. Unlike the villains of the previous two books, I felt no real connection between the mastermind and the rest of the plot. He's so good at being invisible that when he does reveal himself, he just comes off as an annoying little twat (dangerous, but annoying nonetheless) that needs to get slapped down. It might have worked better if we'd had a better view into the internals of Olympian politics, but Amelia would have a hard time plausibly getting that information.
Second, the book twisted the legend of Prometheus in a very interesting way, and then failed to offer any resolution. I'm not necessarily asking for a complete answer, but if the only reason that was there was to provide a question to stump Mr. Arch-Evil for a few seconds, then Wright could have written the ending to leave that out.
Third, Amelia starts to remember a lot more about her past, which raises a number of questions that don't get answered. I was expecting, at least, to see her brother or sister do something more for her.
Finally, the implications of the last scene leave such a sour taste in my mouth. If this is the end of the series, I demand another book, just to give Wright another chance to end on a better note.
I think this is still a powerful book, and very much worth reading (after the other two, so you aren't completely lost). It's not quite as strong as the other two in some ways, and I think it would work better in the middle rather than as the last book. Despite my nitpicks, I still give it a Recommended.