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Mythology, adventure, hilarious chapter titles, historical amusements, Making Things American (But Keeping Them Cool), Not Being Racist, etc.

OH MY GOSH, YOU GUYS! This book! Was FABULOUS! I was expecting an amusing Egyptian version of the Percy Jackson books, and I was PLEASANTLY SURPRISED to find something TOTALLY (well, SORT OF) DIFFERENT and EVEN MORE FUN.

Because not only has Riordan improved in terms of not being INSANE (don't get me wrong, I love the PJ books, but SO MUCH HAPPENS), it's about EGYPT and that's WHAT I WENT TO SCHOOL FOR!

*breathes into a paper bag*

One of my favourite things about the PJ books was how perfectly Riordan shifted Greek Mythology into modern America without softening it up too much. These books? Do it again. ONLY BETTER because the Egyptians were FREAKING INSANE. (There's a bit with Anubis and New Orleans that just...oh, go READ it!)

And as if that didn't blow my mind enough already, there's a scene where one of the characters is explaining why they have to live in Brooklyn instead of Manhattan, and in addition to Manhattan being on the West Bank (which is the Realm of the Dead in Egyptian mythology and therefore to be avoided), the character looks at the Empire State Building and says "Well yes, and also because Manhattan has...other problems", WHICH MEANS CROSSOVERS! AND BRAIN EXPLOSIONS!

The characters are great. There are two main characters, who shift POV Narration. They are brother and sister. They are both sort of fabulous. They have SERIOUS ISSUES and THOUGHTS ABOUT ABANDONMENT and on top of everything else, RACIAL PROBLEMS because one of them looks like their (black) father and one of the looks like their (white) mother, so when people find out they're siblings, they always get THAT LOOK, and it causes them TRAUMA AND UPSETNESS, but Riordan MAKES IT WORK.

Which brings me to race. There were sort of Characters of Colour in the PJ books, but SEVERAL IMPORTANT CHARACTERS in this book are black. Or Arabic. And I love it. Because Sadie, who thinks of herself as mixed-race, passes as a white British girl, and is separated from her brother, whom her grandparents don't want because he's too black. Which is horrible and traumatizing, and Sadie DEALS WITH IT. AND IT'S AWESOME. Anubis even falls for her, not because she's pretty, but because she's SO DARN FABULOUS IN USEFUL WAYS.

And as if that weren't enough, the book is written as a message to me, the reader. Which I think is really cool. There were hints of it in PJ (more in the Demigod Files), but this is an actual message to other kids with the blood of the pharaohs. And I think that's really cool. It certainly makes for compelling reading.

Oh, and it's drop dead hysterical, as you can probably imagine. I didn't keep a list, but if i had, there would be about a hundred quotations.

Basically, everything that made the PJ books so great has been refined and improved in the Kane Chronicles. I am super excited and pleasantly surprised.

So on my almost completely arbitrary sliding scale of book ratings (yes, [livejournal.com profile] emmaorgana, I'll admit it), I give it an 9.5 out of 10.

ETA: Emma tells me it was [livejournal.com profile] sache8 who said I was arbitrary. ;)

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