Full description not available
V**N
Good book
Great book for my grandson an keeps him interested in Reading
G**N
Excellent trilogy
Definitely best read in order so I am glad I bought the combined trilogy. Excellent character development and language usage, though the kindle editors could have done a better job. Don't let the bad editing put you off. Just read over the errors as the sentence should be or as it makes sense to you. One error that bothered me but would be unknown to most Western readers involves the description of the Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia. I recently spent 4 years in Russia with nearly a month in St. Petersburg. If you ever get the chance to go there DO! It's a beautiful city with centuries of European and Russian history including the home of the first Russian naval academy. I walked near the Hermitage nearly every day and, yes, it is so huge it would take at least a week, if not more, to see all of the exhibits and some of them are truly incredible! However, as of 2010 it was definitely not white and gold but bright aqua!! As an adult reader and former middle school teacher I found this series highly entertaining (enough to make it hard to put down) and I learned a great deal about the Egyptian gods, their roles, and how they fit in the lives of ancient Egyptians, as well as interesting facts about modern places in Egypt and elsewhere all while enjoying a well done great read! I also love the rather unique alternating point of view recorded journaling between Sadie and Carter format. A great way to encourage kids to journal their own experiences, either written or recorded. You never know when a life experience may become a jumping point for a future book and it's nice to have that experience described and documented at the time when it's fresh in your memory! I highly recommend the books for advanced upper elementary through adult readers. Under age 10 (advanced) or so the descriptions of battle, the various gods, the duat, death, etc. might be a little frightening to youngsters unless read by an adult who can debrief the child by discussing the story. With both male and female heroes it would appeal to both genders and is full of terrific life philosophies for young people to think about following in their own lives. Especially some of the things Julius Kane tells his son, Carter. Carter and Sadie are both excellent role models that are 3-dimensional and easily identified with in their normal teenager modes. Keep them coming, Mr. Riordan!
T**Y
I WANT MORE!
I did my research and it was by far the cheapest and quality way to go directly with Amazon. :) It was 29$ or 30$ elsewhere. On here, I got it for 27$ with FREE SHIPPING! It was handled with care, packaged and shipped fast. You DO get posters! But they're like mini posters and the front and back of the two you get have characters on each side. I got Sadie, Carter, Horus, and Isis. Though, I'm not sure if it's different for everyone?I read the whole TRILOGY right after I took off the plastic casing! I should've spanned my time out to read it... but I was anxious. Especially since I already read Rick's new addition to Percy Jackson series, "The Mark of Athena." Anyway, yes! I finished reading these books within 2 days and I ABSOLUTELY loved it! I want more, though. Ha-ha.(There are spoilers, so don't read beyond this if you haven't read it yet!)_____________________________________________________________________________________For Carter, I actually liked that the author gave him and his sister a bit of sibling jealousy and resentment--I know this all too well myself. Though, I found it nice that he didn't make it overdone with their "Why does he/she get everything and I don't!" sort of tiff. But he was a bit of a coward and lagged behind a lot in the beginning. I also enjoyed that both siblings were of different skin tones, that brought a whole new diversity of "Are you really related to your sister?" and always looked at Sadie like she's an alien for having lighter skin.For Sadie, I loved that the author didn't make her into an annoying little girl NOR have that "I'm rich, so I'm a snob" sort of personality. I LOVE the fact that she lived in London and she talked British! I'm in love with the UK's slang for words, it's fun to have a character with that kind of personality. I do love her GET IT DONE attitude, it made up her for brother being a coward most of the time, which bugged me from time to time. I also liked the fact that the author gave her more girl attributes on obsessing about putting hair dye in her hair--every female does this. The author did a good job at also portraying her longing for wanting to have been traveling with her father and wanting her fathers love, other than just seeing Carter and her father twice a year because of the custody battle their grandparents won.For the kids father, I'm not too sure that I can really interpret his character since he was very secretive from the get-go and died shortly after in the British Museum. He was pretty vague in the beginning, though throughout the series he does come back into play as being the host for Osiris. After they introduce the father back, he still doesn't have much involvement other than running the Underworld... but I do love that the author did give him father responsibilities and actually ACT like a father to Sadie later on. But I think the father was mostly just involved in getting his wife back other than being with his kids.For the kids mother, I can't really say much about her since the author already had her dead and only lets her appear every once in a while.For Anubis... HE WAS GORGEOUS! What-the-fruit? I wouldn't want him inhabiting another boy... since technically Anubis and Walt were TWO different people with TWO different personalities, although they had the same abilities. I also think it's especially creepy since Sadie can see into the Duat and actually notice Anubis underneath it all... I don't know--I just don't know. lolFor Isis, I think she was really annoying. Especially since Sadie is her host... which I find disturbing. I know "Gods don't have a sense of DNA" mumbo-jumbo but it was creepy that Isis was inside Sadie and her son Horus was inside her brother, Carter. I can't seem to get over that. But anyway, she caused the whole war with dethroning Osiris--basically she's just like Hera in Percy Jackson.For Horus, I thought he was just narcissistic. At first, I enjoyed that he can control Hawks, etc etc. But then after he kept whining about Carter needing to merge with him all the time with Isis doing the same to Sadie... was irritating. It gets overbearing as the series drags on.For Set, I actually loved his 80% bad guy and 20% good guy act. I also enjoyed that Sadie learned his true name as the "Evil One" and controlled him. Despite that he was crooked, he was awesome. Though, I was like "Oh, C'mon!" when he gets captured by another person, in Russia. His character actually reminds me of Bartimaeus (From Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud), with his witty attitude and uninterested with humans and things. :)For Amos, I thought he was pretty weak throughout the whole series, being the kids uncle and all. Especially when he goes through a psychotic break after Set inhabited his body. Then after he recovered, he was still weak! Even when he agreed for Set to inhabit his body again to save the world with his niece and nephew, he didn't really help much at all.For Bes, well... he was grotesque but fun loving. I'm glad that the kids had someone that they can ACTUALLY count on, along with Bast. Though... it was horrifying when the author describes that he puts on his "ugly suit" WHICH IS A SPEEDO! EWWWWWWW! And goes "Boo!" It works but still, the image has forever burned in my mind like Carter said? Or maybe Sadie? Oh well.For Bast, I LOVE HER! It's funny to have a human act like a cat. Or is it the other way around? Oh well. But I found it odd that she only wears a leotard... though her hair spazzing out like cats fur does when they're scared or pissed was HILARIOUS. :) Even though she's an "adult"--she was cute. Although, I did find myself wanting to strangle her when she didn't do much in the beginning and when she kept keeping information away from Carter and Sadie.For the other bad guys, some of them... uh, I guess worked? Most of them didn't. I don't think I liked anyone else. Except that one Goddess of Hunt who promised to hand over Bes's shadow if Sadie and Walt were able to survive her hunt. I found it devilishly amusing when they dumbfounded her about Jelly Babies like Annabeth did to Arcane in promising her to display her tapestry in "The Mark of Athena."For the other good guys, some of them also worked and some of them didn't. I didn't really care for the Baboons... That humming bird reject that becomes Carters pet was also a bit odd. The Hippo that is in love with Bes was also bit awkward since she had a pregnant belly and is the mother of birth or something? And she says she's not pregnant (weird).For the locations, I loved that they did traveling around the world kind of thing like Rick did in his Percy Jackson series. They went from London to Egypt, to Cairo, to Russia, etc etc. That made the whole adventure interesting. Especially when the kids actually do have to venture through real TOMBS to find the artifacts they need to save the world and their friends.For the Duat, it was interesting that it was used a portal. But I would find it annoying after the first go as well because you always get sand blasted on you. I was also glad that there were "cool down" times, approx. 12hrs before the portal can be used again. This made it more enjoyable since it stopped the bad guys from capturing them all the time. It was also nice that the author made other ways for them to travel other than using the pillar Duat's.There is one last thing to add--it does mention in the book that they cannot travel to Manhattan since there are other Gods there and they cannot interfere with them and that there was a black horse flying through the sky (Rick tied in his Percy Jackson series perfectly with this one). I'll stop here, though. But if you want something more to read while your waiting for his other series, then you should get this! Especially if you also enjoyed reading Bartimaeus Trilogy by Jonathan Stroud. And it is cheaper buying it on here than getting it in store or anywhere else.
C**N
Buen libro, en especial si eres fan de rick riordan
Apenas voy en el primer libro sin embargo Rick no decepciona, es una historia interesante y cautivadora
E**N
Incrível
Muito bem preservado
A**E
fab
Great book with touching features and an amazing storyline totally recommendthis book for 10-12 year olds! 😊 Great job Rick Riordan!😁
C**E
Muy buena relación calidad precio
Llegó muy bien envuelto y sin daños. Al comprar el boxset se abarata el precio de los libros en vez de comprarlos por separado.
P**.
Ein MUSS für jeden Rick Riordan Fan!
Als riesiger Rick Riordan Fan kann ich die Trilogie nur empfehlen! (Btw: es wird aktuell sogar an Filmadaptionen gearbeitet!)