Camp Trinity
This is a list of all of the books and short stories that are included on this page in order by appearance.
Be sure to check the book descriptions for the reasons for the age rating, as these are just estimates based on what I personally would have been okay reading, but may not be accurate for you.
Be sure to check the book descriptions for the reasons for the age rating, as these are just estimates based on what I personally would have been okay reading, but may not be accurate for you.
- Camp Trinity #1, Camp Trinity--10+
- Camp Trinity #2, The Eternal Empire--11+
- Camp Trinity #3, Immortal Death--12+
- Camp Trinity #4, The Imperial Throne--12+
- Camp Trinity #5, The Golden Dynasty--12+
- Defenders of the Duat #1, The Storm Tower--14+
- Defenders of the Duat #2, The Fire Temple--14+
- Defenders of the Duat #3, The Ice Castle--14+
- Defenders of the Duat #4, The Aquatic Shrine--14+
- Defenders of the Duat #5, The Earth Monument--14+
- Demigod Quest #1, Immortal Secrets--14+
- Hellbound #1, The Runaways--14+
- Hellbound #2, The Stolen Sun--14+
- The Asgard Chronicles #1, Stormbound--14+
- The First Generation #1, The Formation--14+
- Elementalist #1, The Timekeeper--14+
- Elementalist #2, Bird of Prey--14+
- The Seelie Court #1, The White Flag--14+
- Beautiful Chaos #1, The Dark One--15+
- Beautiful Chaos #2, The Depths of Hell---15+
- The Spiral #1, The Viking Lord--14+
- The Spiral #2, Wolf Blood--14+
- The Spiral #3, The World Tree--14+
- Game of Pain (novel)--14+
- The Dark Year (novel)--15+
- Camp Trinity Guidebook (novel)--14+ default rating
- The Daughter of Death (short story)--14+ default rating
Camp Trinity
The first book of the Camp Trinity series. Jo wrote the chapters by Heather, Eryn wrote the chapters by Autumn, and we worked together to write Libby's point of view. Fans of Rick Riordan's Heroes of Olympus books will love this new demigod adventure! The series is inspired by Rick Riordan's work but is not based off of them, as the plot and characters are our own.
Camp Trinity is a story about three girls who discover they are demigods, and they go to a special camp for Greek, Roman, and Egyptian demigods called Camp Trinity. With campers going missing and a new threat rising to destroy the gods, these three demigods are the only ones who can save Olympus.
Estimated age range: 10+ will probably be okay, a few uses of crap/hell but nothing worse. Violence contains minor, vague descriptions.
Camp Trinity #2, The Eternal Empire
Jo wrote the chapters by Heather, Eryn wrote the chapters by Autumn, and we worked together to write Libby's point of view.
In the second book of the series, the girls try to help Artemis find true love. Zeus gave Artemis one year before she must honor her vow again and swear off men forever, and she wants to have a child in that time. New demigods are introduced and the quests will only get darker as the girls venture deeper into the mythological world.
Estimated age range: 11+ will probably be okay. A few uses of hell, but no other swearing. The violence is still not overly descriptive, but not suitable for younger children.
Camp Trinity #3, Immortal Death
Jo wrote the chapters by Heather, Hal, and Jackson's perspectives and Eryn wrote the chapters by Autumn and Ray's perspectives. We both worked together on Libby's perspective.
This book reveals how the demigods plan to save Artemis's daughter, Meeka, from dying. With romantic tension between the questers, it makes it all the more difficult when they have to journey to the most dangerous place in mythology--the afterlife. The journey becomes far darker and more intense as the missions become more serious, bringing the war with Tartarus even closer than ever.
Estimated age range: 12+ will probably be okay. The violence is slightly more detailed than the previous books and the plotline considerably darker, however there remains no sexual content. The language consists of numerous uses of the word "hell", though nothing worse appears.
Camp Trinity #4, The Imperial Throne
Jo wrote the chapters by Heather, Eryn wrote the chapters by Autumn, and we worked together to write Libby's point of view.
In the fourth book of the Camp Trinity series, the gang heads into a magic world called Zeldor where fairies and elves are quite real and not all as nice as stories would lead one to believe. They have to try to convince the king's armies to join the camp and fight against Tartarus as the threat of total destruction gets closer and closer to becoming a reality, but are instead sent off to hunt down the thief of their sacred throne, someone the demigods know all too well.
Estimated age range: 12+ will probably be okay. The swearing worsens slightly and the violence becomes more descriptive and bloody. Sexual content remains with couples merely kissing and nothing explicit included.
Camp Trinity #5, The Golden Dynasty
Jo wrote the chapters by Heather, Eryn wrote the chapters by Autumn, and we worked together to write Libby's point of view.
The 5th and final book of the Camp Trinity series leads the gang straight to the most important fight yet. Tartarus himself has arrived and is raging war on the camp, and with the armies of Camp Trinity unable to work together, it seems there will be no end to the fighting. When someone starts the war, someone has to finish it. If the camp doesn't win, it'll be the end of Olympus.
Estimated age range: 12+ should be okay. The language is considerably worse, but only "hell" appears frequently. The violence is also considerably worse, so if you're not into blood and gore, perhaps 12 isn't the best age. It is insinuated that a couple of teenagers have had sex, though this is not outright stated.
Defenders of the Duat
Defenders of the Duat #1, The Storm Tower
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Camp Trinity.
In the second Camp Trinity series, the demigods are faced with a new quest requiring them to find the missing orbs of power possessed by the Guardians, ancient deities created by the gods to protect their magic. Facing all sorts of new challenges, they must kill the Guardians in order to take their place and stop the king of the Egyptian gods from taking over the world and destroying the gods.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. The language is relatively bad and frequent, though not too horrible. The violence is considerably more detailed, but not generally in an overly disturbing way. The sexual content is at a minimum with no nudity or sex, though sex is mentioned. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised.
Defenders of the Duat #2, The Fire Temple
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Camp Trinity.
In the second adventure in the Camp Trinity: Defenders of the Duat series, the demigods will face new monsters and new dangers on their journey to find the orb of Fire and stop Ra. The only question is, do the dangers come from their enemy or from them? With their ship crashed on a deserted island and Heather on the brink of losing her mind, they can't even trust themselves.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. The language is relatively bad and frequent, though not too horrible. The violence is considerably more detailed, but not generally in an overly disturbing way. The sexual content is at a minimum with no nudity or sex included. There is a trigger. Reader discretion is advised.
Defenders of the Duat #3, The Ice Castle
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Camp Trinity.
In the third book, the team splits up to find the Norse demigods, prevent the Egyptian gods from joining Ra, and hunt down the orb of the ice Guardian. Autumn must figure out how to stop Bast from turning to the dark side while off on her own. Hal must confront his demons as they begin to come to life. Jackson carries a heavy secret that can't remain hidden for long.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. The language is relatively bad and frequent, though not too horrible. The violence is considerably more detailed, but not generally in an overly disturbing way. The sexual content is at a minimum with no nudity or sex included. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised.
Defenders of the Duat #4, The Aquatic Shrine
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Camp Trinity.
The journey only seems to get harder towards the end of the line as Heather is taken captive by Ra and imprisoned on his ship. Jackson learns the truth about his father and his relationship with Set, and Autumn struggles with no longer being a demigod. To make matters worse, the Guardian of the water orb is far more difficult to catch than most, as it can change form at will and can become anyone--the one you fear the most, the one you love the most. Anyone.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. The language is relatively bad and frequent, though not too horrible. The violence is considerably more detailed, but not generally in an overly disturbing way. The sexual content is at a minimum, but it is implied that some of Ra's prisoners are there for sexual purposes. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised.
Defenders of the Duat #5, The Earth Monument
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Camp Trinity.
In the final adventure for the earth orb, the demigods must defeat Ra once and for all. The only problem is that Jackson knows how to stop Ra, and the team turns on each other in order to get the information from him that he won't give them. Heather is dealing with serious PTSD and Hal is still devastated over the loss of a man that was like a father to him. Autumn is trying to deal with the god that she hosts and relationship troubles while Andy tries to decide if he loves Autumn or Libby enough to chose one over the other.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. The language is relatively bad and frequent, though not too horrible. The violence is considerably more detailed, but not generally in an overly disturbing way. The sexual content does not have overly explicit descriptions, but there are frequent flashbacks to moments that suggest that some of the characters had sex, but the scenes are not explicit or overly detailed. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised.
Demigod Quest
Demigod Quest #1, Immortal Secrets
The chapters describing Heather, Hal, Ben or Jackson's perspectives are written by Jo, and the chapters describing Autumn, Libby, Matt or Andy's perspectives are written by Eryn. This is the official sequel series to Defenders of the Duat.
It has been two years since the demigods became Guardians and stopped Ra. Heather has been attending her demigod school while she and Jackson try to find a way to get rid of the Guardian powers. Autumn, Ray, Andy and Libby have all returned to their homes to live their mortal lives, but things never work out that easily. When their Guardian powers mysteriously vanish, Hermes tells the demigods what they're up against, the bigger threat that the gods fear has come.
Ben Walker? He's just a regular college student, except that he's deaf and members of his family have been dropping dead in horrible accidents his entire life. As for Hal...he's been around. With Ra's experiment making it impossible for him to live amongst his friends and the mortals, Hal has been on the run trying to find a way to cure his condition while Ra forces him to kill innocent people left and right. Maybe Ben is the only one who can help him put a stop to it all.
Estimated age range: 15+ should be okay. The language is frequent and includes a lot worse of language than previous series. The violence is somewhat detailed and there is more sexual content than in previous series, though not too descriptive. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised
It has been two years since the demigods became Guardians and stopped Ra. Heather has been attending her demigod school while she and Jackson try to find a way to get rid of the Guardian powers. Autumn, Ray, Andy and Libby have all returned to their homes to live their mortal lives, but things never work out that easily. When their Guardian powers mysteriously vanish, Hermes tells the demigods what they're up against, the bigger threat that the gods fear has come.
Ben Walker? He's just a regular college student, except that he's deaf and members of his family have been dropping dead in horrible accidents his entire life. As for Hal...he's been around. With Ra's experiment making it impossible for him to live amongst his friends and the mortals, Hal has been on the run trying to find a way to cure his condition while Ra forces him to kill innocent people left and right. Maybe Ben is the only one who can help him put a stop to it all.
Estimated age range: 15+ should be okay. The language is frequent and includes a lot worse of language than previous series. The violence is somewhat detailed and there is more sexual content than in previous series, though not too descriptive. There is a potential trigger. Reader discretion is advised
Hellbound
Hellbound #1, The Runaways
This is the first book in a series solely written by Jo.
When Hal James was five years old, his mother was mysteriously killed by the power of a god of death. Summer Davis lost her mother and was separated from the only family that she had left, the Stones'. Neal Lars lost his own mother and discovered he was a demigod, but his parentage remained a mystery. Kit Thomas is trapped in a mortal body that can't remember the past lives that she has lived. Dainë Brewer is being trained to become an assassin for Tartarus's uprising army. Discover the true stories behind some of the most mysterious demigods and how the awakening of Tartarus began.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be violence and language. There will be mentions of sexual content, passionate moments involving teenagers and insinuations, though there will be no scenes where anybody actually has sex. There are, however, serious triggers throughout the story and reader discretion is advised.
When Hal James was five years old, his mother was mysteriously killed by the power of a god of death. Summer Davis lost her mother and was separated from the only family that she had left, the Stones'. Neal Lars lost his own mother and discovered he was a demigod, but his parentage remained a mystery. Kit Thomas is trapped in a mortal body that can't remember the past lives that she has lived. Dainë Brewer is being trained to become an assassin for Tartarus's uprising army. Discover the true stories behind some of the most mysterious demigods and how the awakening of Tartarus began.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be violence and language. There will be mentions of sexual content, passionate moments involving teenagers and insinuations, though there will be no scenes where anybody actually has sex. There are, however, serious triggers throughout the story and reader discretion is advised.
Hellbound #2, The Stolen Sun
This is the second book in a series written solely by Jo.
Hal James and Neal Lars have been at Camp Trinity for more than a year and still have not learned anything new about the threat Janus poses on the demigod world. Then they are sent out on a quest with none other than their worst enemy, Asher Gard, to figure out what's going on. Dainë Brewer and Summer Davis are completing their training and preparing to go on a quest to prove whether or not Summer is worthy of hosting a god of her own. Emily Stone is on a quest of her own to stop them. Taka Kanuta is a disgrace to his family, that's no secret. The secret is that he's a demigod and if anyone were to find out, he would be executed by his village. When he is forced to use his powers and reveal himself, he must find his way to Camp Kibuka where he will encounter a group of demigods on a quest that could save or destroy the world. Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be violence and language. There will be mentions of sexual content, passionate moments involving teenagers and insinuations, though there will be no scenes where anybody actually has sex. There are, however, serious triggers throughout the story and reader discretion is advised. |
The Asgard Chronicles
The Asgard Chronicles #1, Stormbound
This is the first book in a series written solely by Jo.
The Asgard Chronicles features Norse demigods that have no idea Camp Trinity even exists. The Norse demigods attend a demigod safe haven called the Asgard House where Norse demigods train, go to school, and remain completely hidden from reality through a magic shield. When Gwyn, the daughter of Odin, brings the son of Loki to Asgard House, the prophecy she foresaw will come to pass as a particularly dark demigod releases Tyr from his prison. Join the children of Odin, Loki, Thor, Balder and Hel in this new adventure.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be some relatively bad though not terrible, relatively frequent swears and likely the occasional mentions of sex, but no actual sexual content. The violence will be about at the level of Camp Trinity #5, The Golden Dynasty, perhaps slightly worse. There will be a trigger warning, as depression and suicide comes up frequently with one of the characters. Reader discretion is advised.
The Asgard Chronicles features Norse demigods that have no idea Camp Trinity even exists. The Norse demigods attend a demigod safe haven called the Asgard House where Norse demigods train, go to school, and remain completely hidden from reality through a magic shield. When Gwyn, the daughter of Odin, brings the son of Loki to Asgard House, the prophecy she foresaw will come to pass as a particularly dark demigod releases Tyr from his prison. Join the children of Odin, Loki, Thor, Balder and Hel in this new adventure.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be some relatively bad though not terrible, relatively frequent swears and likely the occasional mentions of sex, but no actual sexual content. The violence will be about at the level of Camp Trinity #5, The Golden Dynasty, perhaps slightly worse. There will be a trigger warning, as depression and suicide comes up frequently with one of the characters. Reader discretion is advised.
The First Generation
The First Generation #1, The Formation
This series is written solely by Jo.
The first of a trilogy based on the original demigods that founded Camp Trinity, explaining how some of the villains of the Camp Trinity series were defeated originally and answering any questions you could possibly have on the formation of Camp Trinity.
Lucas Foyer is the first demigod and, as far as he knew, the only one of his kind. That was, of course, until he met the keeper of the Temple of Souls, Mari. After Tartarus is banished into the pit, the two determine that the best way to keep demigods safe is to build a camp on the protected island that the Temple of Souls is located on, but they have to make a deal with the gods first. They have to find and protect the demigods of the world, all of them.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be frequent swearing but the worst swears will be avoided. The sexual content will be non-descriptive, however there are some situations in which sex will be mentioned. Violence will be relatively descriptive. Reader discretion is advised.
The first of a trilogy based on the original demigods that founded Camp Trinity, explaining how some of the villains of the Camp Trinity series were defeated originally and answering any questions you could possibly have on the formation of Camp Trinity.
Lucas Foyer is the first demigod and, as far as he knew, the only one of his kind. That was, of course, until he met the keeper of the Temple of Souls, Mari. After Tartarus is banished into the pit, the two determine that the best way to keep demigods safe is to build a camp on the protected island that the Temple of Souls is located on, but they have to make a deal with the gods first. They have to find and protect the demigods of the world, all of them.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There will be frequent swearing but the worst swears will be avoided. The sexual content will be non-descriptive, however there are some situations in which sex will be mentioned. Violence will be relatively descriptive. Reader discretion is advised.
Elementalist
Elementalist #1, Timekeeper
This is the first book of a trilogy written solely by Jo.
This story takes place during Defenders of the Duat as Jordan Wesley, Henry Asher, Troy Smith, and Sally Rice are joined by three new demigods and must go on a quest to stop an ancient demigod host of Ra from destroying the world.
Logan has no memory of who he is or where he's from. All they know is that he traveled through time from the original war with Ra in order to stop him in the present day. Raven isn't exactly to be trusted. She fought on Tartarus's side in the war, only to surrender before the battle was lost. She may have been allowed to attend Camp Trinity, but she won't make an effort to befriend anyone, hiding her dark secrets that nobody could possibly understand. And Jordan is just trying to keep everyone in line while a group of demigods that can't stand each other try to work together, not to mention that her sort-of-boyfriend who is also a mortal can't stay out of the way.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There's a lot of swearing and relatively descriptive violence. While the sexual content is not overly descriptive, sex and rape are mentioned multiple times throughout the book. Reader discretion is advised.
This story takes place during Defenders of the Duat as Jordan Wesley, Henry Asher, Troy Smith, and Sally Rice are joined by three new demigods and must go on a quest to stop an ancient demigod host of Ra from destroying the world.
Logan has no memory of who he is or where he's from. All they know is that he traveled through time from the original war with Ra in order to stop him in the present day. Raven isn't exactly to be trusted. She fought on Tartarus's side in the war, only to surrender before the battle was lost. She may have been allowed to attend Camp Trinity, but she won't make an effort to befriend anyone, hiding her dark secrets that nobody could possibly understand. And Jordan is just trying to keep everyone in line while a group of demigods that can't stand each other try to work together, not to mention that her sort-of-boyfriend who is also a mortal can't stay out of the way.
Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There's a lot of swearing and relatively descriptive violence. While the sexual content is not overly descriptive, sex and rape are mentioned multiple times throughout the book. Reader discretion is advised.
Elementalist #2, Bird of Prey
This is the second book of a trilogy written solely by Jo.
Raven wakes up in somewhere rather strange, a mountain home that is based around clocks. The thing is, the Timekeeper in charge of the place won't see her or tell her where Tom and Logan are. Troy, Sally, Daria, Jordan and Raven plot to infiltrate the headquarters of Solis's army in order to stop him, but trapped inside the mountain that is far darker than it seems, this is not the easiest plan. Making matters worse, there's a traitor in their midst and Logan has begun to remember who he was before time traveling into the future. Estimated age range: 14+ should be okay. There's a lot of swearing and relatively descriptive violence. While the sexual content is not overly descriptive, sex and rape are mentioned multiple times throughout the book. Reader discretion is advised |
The Seelie Court
The Seelie Court #1, The White Flag
The first book in a series written by Jo.
The series centers on a young siren during a time when the Seelie courts order the death of all half-breeds--including one of her best friends. Danai and her Seelie friend Maia attempt to rescue night elf demigod Alec before he is executed, but Danai finds herself visited by Poseidon and sent to find her brother, Andy Samson. Over in England, Tilly's illness grows worse and she is visited in her dreams by Poseidon, telling her to go to the ocean before she dies, and she suddenly finds herself being cured. The four have to defeat the Seelie courts before they kill all the demigods. Estimated Age Range: 14+ should be okay. There is a considerable amount of swearing and plenty of violence, some relatively descriptive, but the sexual content is at a minimum. There is a trigger warning! Reader discretion is advised. |
Beautiful Chaos
Beautiful Chaos #1, The Dark One
This is the first book in a trilogy written by Jo.
Athena di Liberta is desperate to rebel, so she does something reckless. Liam Gallagher is sick of being bullied, so he fights back. Calliope Barton wants to impress someone, so she takes the fall for a crime she didn't commit. They all get sent to boarding school, where they learn they are actually the children of the gods. They go to a place called Eden, a safe haven for demigods, and are immediately given a prophecy that could end in the destruction of the entire world. Jason Angelos believes that he is the son of Erebus, god of darkness, and has spent his entire life in Tartarus itself. All of that changes when his "father" allows him to meet his mortal mother and sends him on a mission to kill three demigods who would interfere with his plan, and he learns the truth. He is destined to save the world or destroy it.
Estimated Age Range: 15+ should be okay. There is a considerable amount of swearing (including several uses of f***) and plenty of violence, some relatively descriptive, but the sexual content is at a minimum. It is stated someone was sexually abused as a child and there is a woman who had a baby as a teenager, but there are no sex scenes. There is a serious trigger warning! Reader discretion is advised.
Athena di Liberta is desperate to rebel, so she does something reckless. Liam Gallagher is sick of being bullied, so he fights back. Calliope Barton wants to impress someone, so she takes the fall for a crime she didn't commit. They all get sent to boarding school, where they learn they are actually the children of the gods. They go to a place called Eden, a safe haven for demigods, and are immediately given a prophecy that could end in the destruction of the entire world. Jason Angelos believes that he is the son of Erebus, god of darkness, and has spent his entire life in Tartarus itself. All of that changes when his "father" allows him to meet his mortal mother and sends him on a mission to kill three demigods who would interfere with his plan, and he learns the truth. He is destined to save the world or destroy it.
Estimated Age Range: 15+ should be okay. There is a considerable amount of swearing (including several uses of f***) and plenty of violence, some relatively descriptive, but the sexual content is at a minimum. It is stated someone was sexually abused as a child and there is a woman who had a baby as a teenager, but there are no sex scenes. There is a serious trigger warning! Reader discretion is advised.
Beautiful Chaos #2, The Depths of Hell
After bringing the son of Neptune back to Eden, everything was quiet. Soteria is still hostage and Erebus has yet to escape from Tartarus. But Liam still can't shake the feeling that something bad is about to happen. Athena just wants Jason to get better so she can prove that she isn't wrong about him. And Calliope is a bit preoccupied with trying to figure out who her godly parent is and is more than happy to forget everything that happened. But then their moment of silence is broken and one of Erebus's children comes looking for Jason, opening a portal to Tartarus in the middle of Eden, taking Jason and Liam down into the pit. Athena has to figure out what happened to a son of Athena, driven mad by Aegis, and how to stop Soteria from destroying the camp, and Calliope has to journey to the endless night on her own. If they fail, then Erebus will come out of the pit to destroy Eden.
Estimated Age Range: 15+ should be okay. There is a considerable amount of swearing (including several uses of f***) and plenty of violence, some relatively descriptive, but the sexual content is at a minimum. There are mentions of characters being sexually abused, but there are no descriptive scenes. There is a serious trigger warning! Reader discretion is advised. |
The Spiral
The Spiral #1, The Viking Lord
The first book in a series by Jo centering mainly on the Norse myths of Ragnarök and the Völva.
Nate's life is anything but ordinary even before a tulpa that looks like a tree tries to kill him. His mother was murdered, his father is dead, and suddenly he's using magic powers and his best friend is telling him that he's a demigod. Kate is a warrior, strong and determined to prevent Ragnarök from destroying the world. In the process, she'd love to figure out why her kitsune mother didn't tell her what she was before her powers manifested. And Luke? Luke just wants to ride dragons, damn it. What's so wrong about that? Other than the fact that he's supposed to save the world all on his own when really, given what he knows about humanity, they deserve to burn in a hellfire.
Estimated Age Range: Age 14+ should be okay. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has tried and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
Nate's life is anything but ordinary even before a tulpa that looks like a tree tries to kill him. His mother was murdered, his father is dead, and suddenly he's using magic powers and his best friend is telling him that he's a demigod. Kate is a warrior, strong and determined to prevent Ragnarök from destroying the world. In the process, she'd love to figure out why her kitsune mother didn't tell her what she was before her powers manifested. And Luke? Luke just wants to ride dragons, damn it. What's so wrong about that? Other than the fact that he's supposed to save the world all on his own when really, given what he knows about humanity, they deserve to burn in a hellfire.
Estimated Age Range: Age 14+ should be okay. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has tried and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
The Spiral #2, Wolf Blood
The second book in the series written by Jo, Wolf Blood continues where The Viking Lord left off.
Ragnarök is only days away and the group has been split apart. Kate and Kirk need to find a way to escape from Yggdrasil and they have to trust a night elf they barely know to bring the sword pieces to Luke. Luke is dying and was brought to his father, a god known as the enemy, because that is the only hope he has of surviving long enough to fight the Midgard Serpent and kill it. Nate has begun to struggle to hold back, realizing that if he doesn't tell Luke how he feels now, he never will. Assuming that Luke can complete the sword of Arcaeus and survive until Ragnarök comes, the darkness may become too strong for him to fight alone. They'll need to journey to the Asgard House if they're going to stand a chance against the Midgard Serpent and against the monsters lurking within.
Estimated Age Range: Age 14+ should be okay. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has tried and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
Ragnarök is only days away and the group has been split apart. Kate and Kirk need to find a way to escape from Yggdrasil and they have to trust a night elf they barely know to bring the sword pieces to Luke. Luke is dying and was brought to his father, a god known as the enemy, because that is the only hope he has of surviving long enough to fight the Midgard Serpent and kill it. Nate has begun to struggle to hold back, realizing that if he doesn't tell Luke how he feels now, he never will. Assuming that Luke can complete the sword of Arcaeus and survive until Ragnarök comes, the darkness may become too strong for him to fight alone. They'll need to journey to the Asgard House if they're going to stand a chance against the Midgard Serpent and against the monsters lurking within.
Estimated Age Range: Age 14+ should be okay. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has tried and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
The Spiral #3, The World Tree
The Spiral trilogy comes to a close with the final book in the series, The World Tree!
Two years ago when Ragnarök nearly destroyed the world, the only person Nate loved wound up dead. He's traveled the realms since then, trying to find a reason to live, and so far, he hasn't found one. Kate, Harmon and Talia are trying to keep Yggdrasil up and running, protecting all the Völva they can find. Some of the new trainees include demigods Echo, Campbell, Hadley and Emily, who Kate is trying to train to be the next leaders of Yggdrasil but can't get them to listen. One night, a demigod arrives in Yggdrasil insisting that he was sent by Luke, who is still alive. The demigods must go on one last quest to stop Valerie Martyr and the Lexan Establishment from burning Yggdrasil to the ground. Estimated Age Range: Age 14+ should be okay. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised. |
Stand Alone Novels
Game of Pain
A prequel novel to The Spiral trilogy, written by Jo.
A lot happened before the Midgard Serpent decided to destroy the world for the third time. The original Ragnarök, everybody knows the story. Thor killed the Midgard Serpent and then died in the process. A lot of gods died in the process. The second time, though, Arcaeus destroyed Jörmungandr and saved the world. This prequel novel explores how Ragnarök was prevented thousands of years ago by another son of Tyr, as well as eight other stories following the lives of some heroes that we already know and some that we don't. Learn the true stories of Arcaeus Tyrson, Valerie Martyr, Kate Dolohov, Nathan Landon, Luke Martyr, Alda Blackthorn and Kirk Brennan.
This novel will be placed at a 14+ rating. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
A lot happened before the Midgard Serpent decided to destroy the world for the third time. The original Ragnarök, everybody knows the story. Thor killed the Midgard Serpent and then died in the process. A lot of gods died in the process. The second time, though, Arcaeus destroyed Jörmungandr and saved the world. This prequel novel explores how Ragnarök was prevented thousands of years ago by another son of Tyr, as well as eight other stories following the lives of some heroes that we already know and some that we don't. Learn the true stories of Arcaeus Tyrson, Valerie Martyr, Kate Dolohov, Nathan Landon, Luke Martyr, Alda Blackthorn and Kirk Brennan.
This novel will be placed at a 14+ rating. There will be some swearing and some descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is insinuated and a few instances where it is featured, though the actual act itself is never described, as the scene always ends prior to it. There is also a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised.
The Dark Year
A sequel novel to The Spiral/Prequel novel to Flares, written by Jo.
After the tragic events of Ragnarök and the months that followed, Luke Martyr has to set out on his own to complete a quest to the afterlife, Helheim, and return two deceased souls to the land of the living. With his friends no longer by his side and the dead returning to the land of the living just to get in his way, is there any chance that he'll succeed? This novel will be placed at a 15+ rating. There will be plenty of swearing (including a few uses of f***) and descriptive violence. There are several points where sexual abuse is referred to, though no details or descriptive scenes will be included. There is a serious trigger warning! (A character has serious depression and on multiple occasions has and will try to commit suicide). Reader discretion is advised. |
Guidebooks
Camp Trinity Guidebook
This is the official guidebook for the Camp Trinity series, written by Jo Grayson.
A long time ago, Lucas Foyer and Mari Zampa thought it would be a good idea to write a guidebook for the new demigods arriving at their camp, that way they had less questions to answer a million times. Unfortunately, they died before they could finish. Centuries go by without the pages being found, and Mr. Crowe locates them in his desk--their old desk--and decides to work on them again. Following the events of Defenders of the Duat, Artemis decides that she too will continue the work on the guidebook. Years later, the guidebook is finally finished and ready for the demigods at Camp Trinity to read so that they can understand more about their new lives. The guidebook features information about Camp Trinity, including details about the locations, events, and the education and training of the demigods. And the best part? The sections are written by your favorite demigods, and some of the characters even get interviewed by Mr. Crowe and Lady Artemis. This novel will be placed at a 14+ rating. There is a chapter that alludes to the fact that in mythology, Zeus raped Nemesis, though this is not explicitly stated or described in any way. The majority of swearing is like "s***" and such, though crap, hell and damn are used once each (hell is also used to name the underworld). There are also a few uses of swearwords that are not blocked out, though only in the last two chapters. If you wish to read this without seeing the serious swears, just don't read the last two chapters (though they are my personal favorites and are relevant to the series). |
The Daughter of Death
This is a short story written by Jo that takes place during the final chapter of Camp Trinity #2, The Eternal Empire.
Dainë is the daughter of Thanatos and has been sent to abduct or kill the child of Artemis, but did she really fail? This story has no sexual content and there is just one use of the word hell. A girl scars a baby's cheek. That's all there is in this short, but I am going to put 14+ anyway just in case. Realistically, I would have been reading this at 12, maybe younger, but still. Reader discretion is advised. |