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Corydon #2

Corydon and the Fall of Atlantis by Tobias Druitt

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Life has been pretty peaceful for shepherd-boy Corydon and the other monsters since their epic battle with the heroes. Then the Minotaur is kidnapped and Corydon and his friends are faced with a rescue mission.

Paperback

First published July 3, 2006

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About the author

Tobias Druitt

7 books8 followers
Tobias Druitt is a pen name for the mother-and-son writing team of Diane Purkiss and Michael Dowling. Purkiss is on the faculty of Oxford University, and Dowling attends the prestigious Dragon School. They both live in Oxford, England.

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5 stars
17 (19%)
4 stars
31 (36%)
3 stars
28 (32%)
2 stars
9 (10%)
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1 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
Profile Image for Rebecca.
1,414 reviews3 followers
October 20, 2023
I read this book and didn’t like it. I felt that even if I read the first book before this one, I wouldn’t like it. I appreciate the effort put into the worldbuilding, and all the cool Greek mythology stuff. The protagonist is even named Corydon, which is a stock protagonist name in classical works. Sadly, I don’t think Corydon was a good character. He is a bit of a cowardly wuss, uninteresting, and felt more like the sidekick.

Gorgos, a side character, is more interesting but he is also annoying. He probably should be the main character, if only because he fits so many hero cliches. He is reckless, foolhardy, and a jerk. He is the son of Perseus and Medusa, and looks twelve even though he’s actually a toddler. He’s an utter cliche. Another cliche is the monsters being good and the gods being bad. This sort of morality swap is overdone and I would actual prefer traditional morality in stories sometimes.

This book had a lot of missed potential, and I probably should have read the first book before this one. But there’s a lot of bad about this book that I wouldn’t like anyway. The writing was melodramatic and distracting, and the characters are cliches. This book was utterly mediocre and not even the mythology theme saved it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Julie.
1,484 reviews8 followers
June 5, 2009
Corydon’s new-found family of monsters is threatened when the Minotaur is kidnapped. In an inversion of a heroic quest, the monsters set out for Atlantis to find their friend, hampered rather than helped by the Olympian gods. There are some traditional Greek mythological obstacles along the way – I was happy to see the Clashing Rocks – and then some new dangers on Atlantis, where Druitt combines Greek and other mythologies to create a hybrid culture (e.g., katabathos, Vreckan, and the Morge). I felt that this one really dragged in the middle, though, and suffered from an extended stay on Atlantis while Corydon tried to figure out what to do.
440 reviews
January 24, 2016
A good book, I liked it better than the first. A very good plot. It was very exciting and the characters are great, but I think'll forget it pretty fast
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews

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