Kane Chroniclesall About Myths

  1. I do not own the kane chronicles. All of it belongs to the amazing myth-master rick riordan. Hey, sadie here.
  2. The Kane Chronicles is a book series written by Rick Riordan, about two siblings, Carter and Sadie Kane, who find out that they're descendants of Ancient Egyptian magicians and also two lines of pharaohs.
  1. Kane Chronicles Pdf
  2. Kane Chroniclesall About Myths Global Warming
  3. Kane Chroniclesall About Myths Around The World
  4. Kane Chronicles Book 4
  5. How Many Books In The Kane Chronicles

According to Carter Kane, this is because if a person casts no shadow at all, their existence is meaningless. Destroying a sheut cuts all ties to the mortal world that being has as well as the fact that the sheut is an important part of the soul. Apr 3, 2016 - Explore Nyxie's board 'The Kane Cronicles', followed by 899 people on Pinterest. See more ideas about Kane chronicles, Kane, Sadie kane. PlayOnLinux will allow you to play your favorite games on Linux easily.

The god of the sun, Ra was the first pharaoh of the world, back in the days when gods inhabited Egypt. Each day, Ra’s golden sun ship would sail across the sky, and each night it would travel through the underground world of the Duat, sailing the River of Darkness, and fighting off monsters. The Egyptians celebrated each sunrise, when Ra emerged victorious again and caused a new day to begin. After many centuries, Ra became old and senile, and retreated into the heavens, giving up his throne to Osiris.
The god of the earth, Geb was one of the first gods to appear from the sea of chaos at the beginning of time. He appears as a man made of earth, with rivers, forests and hills across his entire body.
Nut was Geb's wife, the goddess of the sky. Yes, we know she’s got a funny name, but she was not the goddess of peanuts. She appeared as a woman with skin like a starry sky, dark blue and covered in constellations. She is often pictured stretching over Geb, as the sky stretches over the earth.
Although Geb and Nut loved each other very much, Ra had a prophecy that their children would try to overthrow him someday, so Ra did his best to keep them apart. Despite this, Nut managed to have five children, and the oldest, Osiris, did indeed take over the throne from Ra.
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Nut’s father, the god of the air, was given the job of keeping Nut and Geb apart. This is why the sky is so far above the earth. The god of the wind stays between them, keeping his daughter from visiting her love the earth. Shu is usually not pictured, because he is invisible like the wind.
The first son of Geb and Nut, Osiris was a wise and good pharaoh when he took over the world from Ra. Osiris taught man about farming, and created the first cities in Egypt. Unfortunately, Osiris’s brother Set was jealous of him. Set tricked him into laying down in a golden coffin, then sealed the coffin and cut it into pieces. Set scattered the pieces all over Egypt, and Osiris’s wife Isis spent years searching for them. Eventually, Isis put her husband back together, binding him in cloth to make the first mummy, but Osiris only came partially back to life. After that, he was the god of the underworld, sitting in judgment over the souls of the dead. He appears as a king with blue skin and white robes.
Osiris’s wife was the goddess of magic, and clever and ambitious woman. She tricked Ra into retiring by poisoning him with a magic snake, then encouraging the old sun god to reveal his secret name so Isis could cure him. Once Isis knew Ra’s secret name, she could force him to do just about anything. She encouraged him to retreat into the sky, opening the throne for Osiris. Isis was the patron of magicians, and loved her husband very much. She encouraged their son Horus to take vengeance on the evil Set, who had killed Osiris. Isis is often pictured as a beautiful woman with multicolored wings.
The god of the desert, storms, and evil, Set was one mean dude. His color was red, the color of sterile soil and the desert. Set was the strongest of the gods, and very tricky. He became pharaoh of Egypt after killing his brother, but was later overthrown by his nephew Horus. After that, Set fled into the desert, where he controlled all the evil harsh lands outside the Nile Valley. Set wasn’t all bad, however. In the old days, he sailed on Ra’s boat and helped defend the sun god from the armies of the chaos serpent Apep. Set is usually pictured with red skin and the head of an unknown animal demon – part dog, part anteater, all ugly.
The river goddess, wife of Set and the sister of Isis. Nephthys didn’t like her husband very much, because after he killed Osiris, Nephthys helped Isis collected his pieces and bind them together. She was a kind and gentle goddess, and mother of Anubis, the god of funeral rites.
Called the Avenger, Horus was the son of Isis and Osiris. When he grew to manhood, he challenged Set and eventually defeated him, becoming the new pharaoh of Egypt. Afterwards, all mortal pharaohs considered themselves to be the descendants of Horus. Horus’s symbol was the falcon, and he is often pictured as a man with a falcon’s head.
Cats were extremely popular in Egypt, because they could kill snakes, scorpions, and other nasty creatures. Bast, the goddess of cats, was just as popular. Bast was a protective goddess, and people would wear amulets with her likeness for good luck, especially during the bad luck Demon Days at the end of each year. In cat form, Bast is often pictured with a knife, fighting the chaos serpent Apep. She was Ra’s faithful cat.
The god of crocodiles was both respected and feared. Crocodiles were strong creatures. In ancient Egypt, an entire city was named after them: Crocodilopolis, and Sobek had a temple with a lake full of crocodiles. However, crocodiles were fearsome predators, and many Egyptians were killed each year if they got too near the river. Sobek was pictured as a crocodile-headed man. His sweat was said to have created the rivers of the world. Yuck!
The goddess of scorpions was both good and bad. She could send scorpions after her enemies, and a single scorpion bite could kill you. On the other hand, you could pray to Serqet for protection from poison, and sometimes she was seen as a guardian of children. She was pictured as a woman with a giant scorpion for a crown. How’d you like that on your head?
Anubis the god of funerals was one of the most important gods, because he helped prepare the soul for the Afterlife and escorted the dead to the hall of judgment. The Egyptians noticed jackals hanging around their graveyards, so they decided jackals must be Anubis’s sacred animals. Priests even wore jackal masks when they made the pharaoh’s body into a mummy. Anubis helped Isis make Osiris into the first mummy. Anubis is usually pictured as a man with a jackal’s head, leading a departed spirit through the Duat.
Bes is god of dwarves, protector of households, mothers and children. One of the ugliest and most popular gods in Ancient Egypt, Bes had the power to scare off evil spirits. He often appeared on amulets and in sculpture as a hairy little man with a lion-like mane and a pug nose. Egyptians believed that dwarves (and other people who were born different) were inherently magical. Bes was considered extremely good luck. He watched over the common man, children, women in childbirth, and anyone else who needed protection from evil.
Khonsu, the god of the moon, loved to gamble. In fact, he once lost five days of moonlight to the sky goddess Nut in a game of senet, which allowed Nut to give birth to her five children. Sometimes, Khonsu is depicted as a hawk-headed god, but more often he looks like a young man with a side-lock of hair, like an Egyptian youth. His favorite color is silver.
Nekhbet is the goddess of vultures. One of the oldest goddesses of Egypt, Nekhbet was a patron of the pharaoh, and is often pictured with her wings spread over the king. Her shrine was in Nekheb, the city of the dead, where she oversaw the oldest oracle in Egypt. Like all vultures, she preyed on the dead and dying. If you see Nekhbet hovering over you, start dancing! Let her know you’re still alive!
Unlike the wise baboons of Thoth, Babi was the god of wild baboons, especially alpha males. He was aggressive and bloodthirsty, and was given the job of eating the wicked dead in the Underworld. He especially loved entrails. Yum! Babi is definitely not a primate you want to fight.

Kane Chroniclesall About Myths Global Warming

Tawaret is the goddess of hippos. While the Egyptians were scared of male hippos, they saw the female hippo goddess Tawaret as a gentle protector. She looked after pregnant women especially, and is often depicted with a swollen belly. Like Bes, she could scare off evil spirits. In fact, in many stories Tawaret is the girlfriend of Bes. What a cute couple!
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The Kane Chronicles is a book series written by Rick Riordan, about two siblings, Carter and Sadie Kane, who find out that they're descendants of Ancient Egyptian magicians and also two lines of pharaohs. The siblings were raised apart most of their life after their mother died, Carter traveling the world with their father, famous Egyptologist Julius Kane, and Sadie living with their grandparents in England. They're brought together on Christmas Eve when their dad tries to 'set things right.' However, things go horribly wrong and the two are sent on a mission to save their father and stop Set, the Egyptian god of Chaos, from ruling the world. The series consists of The Red Pyramid, The Throne of Fire, and The Serpent's Shadow, released on May 1st, 2012.

A graphic novel of The Red Pyramid has been announced for May, 2012. See here.

  • Action Girl: Sadie, Zia, Neith, and Bast. To an extent, Tawaret.
  • All Myths Are True: In this case, Egyptian and a hint of Percy Jackson's Greek.
  • Back From the Dead: Carter and Sadie think their dad was trying to bring their mother back. That wasn't completely true.
    • Walt appears to do this, but he actually just hosted Anubis at the last minute.
  • Badass Army: Set's army of demons.
    • Sarah Jacobi's 'hit squad' of magicians.
  • Badass Boast: 'I am a magician of the house of life. We are TRAINED to fight gods.'
  • Badass Bookworm: Carter, Julius, and Amos.
  • Badass Longcoat: Walt/Anubis gets one at the end of The Serpent's Shadow.
  • Beethoven Was an Alien Spy: Elvis was a magician.
  • Big Applesauce: Amos' mansion is in Brooklyn. 'Manhattan hasother problems.'
  • Big Bad: Set and later Apophis.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Desjardins seems to be this at least once per book. Also counts as Brought Down to Badass, as he manages to execrate Apophis in the second book.
  • Body and Host: When a magician is being possessed by a god they are known as 'hosts' or 'godlings'. Can have shades of body snatching, as the god is sometimes able to forcibly take control of their host's body.
  • Book Dumb: Sadie, much to Carter's dismay.
  • But Not Too Black: While both Carter and Sadie are biracial, Sadie is described as having lighter skin and hair. Most people don't realize they are family when they first meet them.
  • But Not Too Foreign: Sadie was born and raised in America until age 6, where she was moved to England to live with her grandparents.
  • Brother-Sister Team: Carter and Sadie. Having been separated for around six years prior to the beginning of the story, it takes them a little while to get into the hang of things, but they do.
  • Cannot Spit It Out: Walt never manages to explain just what he and Anubis have been discussing but that's mostly Sadie's fault.

Anubis: Couldn't get a word in edgewise?'

  • Card-Carrying Villain: In The Serpent's Shadow, Apophis leaves the Egyptian hieroglyph for chaos wherever he destroys a Nome.
  • The Cavalry: In the third book, the elderly and mostly senile gods from the House of Rest, along with Tawaret and the newly restored Bes charge a horde of demons to rescue the main heroes.
  • The Chessmaster: Apophis. How much? He doesn't even appear until the end of the book and he very nearly tricks Set-a god of Chaos-into blowing up the world for him.
    • Iskandar is the good version.
  • Cool Sword: Carter's khopesh.
  • Crossover Cosmology: Although the book only focuses on the Egyptian gods, Thoth mentions that he gets mistaken for the Greek god Hermes and having meet him and Amos mentions that Manhattan has its own gods, a reference to the Greek gods from Percy Jackson and The Olympians.
    • Monsters also bite it the same way. Turn into sand upon their death but now we know why it takes a bit to come back.
    • The Kane Chronicles also have something similar to PJO's Mist, causing monsters and supernatural items to be invisible or to appear as ordinary animals or objects.
    • Moses also makes an appearance in the history hallway.
    • At the beginning of The Throne Of Fire, Carter mentions that he's seen winged horses across the river in Manhattan.
    • In The Serpent's Shadow problems from other gods are predicted to come.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Sadie and Horus.
  • Defrosting Ice Queen: Zia, arguably Sadie
  • Deus Ex Machina: Bast returning at the end, but justified in that it was actually done by gods.
  • Divine Assistance: Horis, Isis, Bast, Bes, and on occasion, other gods.
  • Divine Parentage: Carter and Sadie, obviously. The Blood of the Pharoahs.
    • Kind of. The gods prefer to take host from certain bloodlines with powerful magic that usually contain at least one pharaoh at some point in time or another. But it's unclear if the gods preferred them because they were pharaohs or if they ended up becoming pharaohs specifically because they could host the gods.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?: Julius is described as being bald, with a goatee. His last name is Kane. He ends up ascending to a higher plane of existence.Hmmm...
  • Eldritch Abomination: Apophis, and to a lesser extent, the Set Animal.
    • Physically, Apophis is a mile-long red snake whose presence melts people's senses, whatever that means. He can also possess people and at one point says he is everywhere.
  • Eldritch Location: The Duat.
  • Eye Scream / Facial Horror: What happened to Menshikov when he tried and failed to awaken Ra.
  • Expy: The series is very similar to Percy Jackson and The Olympians, another series by the same author. One who has read both can easily tell that the characters are alike (apart from the same universe and the same writing style).
    • You have a smart, but shy Carter as Annabeth. A Book Dumb (but not stupid) and sarcastic Sadie as Percy (except she is more outgoing). Anubis also is the god of the afterlife as Nico is the son of the god of death and both lived...for a very long time.
  • French Jerk: Desjardins. Although not so much when he execrates Apophis, thus sacrficing his life to to so.
  • Fighting a Shadow: Shabtis can be used to create 'stand ins' for real magicians. The Zia after the museum incident is also one. The real one is hidden. In 'Throne of Fire' she's saved from The Place of Red Sands.
    • You can also use shadows for more effective execration.
  • Fighting From the Inside: Amos, trying to warn Carter and Sadie that he was really Set's host.
  • Head-in-The-Sand Management: Desjardins spends most of the book following the Cornelius Fudge school of crisis management; eventually he graduates to merely Divided We Fall.
  • Heroic Albino: Philip of Macedonia.
  • Heroic BSOD: When Amos is freed from his possession from Set in the first book, he is so traumatized, he can't utter a single sentence. Makes you wonder just howSet managed to posses the poor dude. Thankfully, he recovers.
  • Heroic Sacrifice: Bast, Ruby Kane, Julius Kane, Desjardins
  • Historical Villain Upgrade: The real Setne was a highly respected religious/political figure in Ancient Egypt, with several myths written about him in which he is the hero.
  • Idiot Hero: Sadie isn't nearly as dumb as other examples, but she's almost as reckless.
  • I Know Your True Name: This is how the heroes manage to enslave Set. Also how Sadie manages to cure Carter of poisoning.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun: Set: 'The complete Set!' That's funny!'
    • In the middle of an evil monologue, no less.
    • In The Throne of Fire:

'It's your best bet,' [Bes] said.
'Bes bet?' Khonsu chuckled. 'Nice!'

    • When they met in person, Sadie said Anubis was 'drop dead gorgeous'.
    • Hapi pills in The Serpent's Shadow.
  • Insult Backfire:
Kane Chroniclesall About Myths

Carter: (About Sekhemet) She's almost as annoying as you.
Horus: Impossible. No one bests Horus.

  • In Which a Trope Is Described: Similar to Percy Jackson, the titles are like this.
    • 'Men Ask For Directions (and Other Signs of the Apocalypse)' is probably the best of these.
  • I Gave My Word: Bast, promising she'd protect Sadie. Led to her Heroic Sacrifice
  • Kid Hero: Carter, Sadie, Zia, and all the kids at Brooklyn House.
  • Language of Magic: It's Ancient Egyptian in this case.
  • Lovecraftian Superpower: Bes's trademark superpower is the ability to distort his face hideously to scare his enemies. It WORKS. GAH.
  • Male Gaze: Carter finds it difficult to look the overendowed hippopatamus goddess Tawaret in the face.
  • The Man Behind the Man: Apophis
  • Marked to Die: Julius knew he would be possessed by Osiris, and eventually end up 'dead' as the host for the Lord of the Dead. Walt's family is also cursed to die young and using magic speeds up the process.
  • Mix-and-Match Critters: Bast, a cat goddess.
  • Monkeys on a Typewriter: Actually ibises.
  • Narrative Profanity Filter: 'The following is a transcript of a digital recording... Background noises such as scuffling, hitting, and cursing by the two speakers have not been transcribed.'
    • In Throne of Fire, characters 'spewing lots of very creative curses' almost becomes a running gag.
  • Nice Job Breaking It Carter: In the end, Apophis being destroyed also causes the gods to retreat, because of some sort of Yin-Yang system.
  • Nightmare Face: A heroic example in Bes[1], and two villainous examples in Menshikov and Face of Horror.
  • Noodle Incident: Carter and Sadie's actions while recording are often briefly described as such.
    • Also, the 'Spatula Incident,' a past fight between Carter and Sadie's father and their maternal grandparents.
    • And the time that their Julius punched his father-in-law in the face.
  • No Such Thing as Wizard Jesus: Averted in another important religious figure- it is made very clear that Moses was actually a magician. On top of that, a comment from Bes in The Throne of Fire suggests that one of his miracles, the parting of the Red Sea, was something any magician from Ancient Egypt could've done.
    • Although gods are manifestly real, All Myths Are True, and Moses was apparently a badass enough wizard that he's the only outsider ever to best the House of Life, so it certainly be said to work anyway.
      • Additionally, it is implied that 'other magic' is just how the Egyptians describe the power of foreign gods.
  • Official Couple: Julius and Ruby, Carter and Zia, Sadie and Walt/Anubis, and Bes and Tawaret.
  • Oh My Gods: Averted as Sadie frequently says 'Oh my God,' and 'God,' throughout the book, but played straight with Bast and others more familiar with Ancient Egypt.
  • Power Trio: Carter and Sadie along with Bast, Zia, Amos...
  • Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner: Sadly, most of it is a spoiler, but...

Kane Chroniclesall About Myths Around The World

Carter: I am Carter Kane, Blood of the Pharaohs, Eye of Horus. And now, Set--brother, uncle, traitor--, I'm going to crush you like a gnat.

Kane Chronicles Book 4

  • Psychic Dreams for Everyone: Both Carter and Sadie have ba trips, often seeing things they wished they hadn't.
  • Red Herring: Set tricks Carter and Sadie into thinking that Desjardins is his host. It's really Amos.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni/Sibling Yin-Yang: It can actually go either way. Normally, Sadie, being more brash in contrast to reserved and bookish Carter, clearly seems to be the red. However, Carter shows more of the impulsiveness seen in the 'red' when in combat partially due to being the host of the warrior god Horus.
  • Sadly Mythtaken: In all fairness, most of the liberties taken with the myths were probably to make the whole thing less...incestuous, but there is one mistake: Ammit the Devourer should be female.
    • This is actually lampshaded in The Serpent's Shadow.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: When Julius attempted to summon Osiris, he released him along with his four siblings, one of which was Set.
  • Sequel Hook: 'Should further recordings fall into my hands, I will relay the information.'
  • Shared Universe: The references under Crossover Cosmology imply that the book is set in the same universe as the Percy Jackson and The Olympians series.
    • Word of God states that they are in the same universe, and that the events of The Red Pyramid happen almost directly after the events of The Last Olympian.
      • Though Rick Riordan needs to pay more attention to his timelines and explosions. The Williamsburg Bridge is destroyed in The Last Olympian, but Our Heroes drive over it in The Red Pyramid. Possibly The Red Pyramid and Throne of Fire take place the winter and spring before the battle of Manhattan and The Serpent's Shadow the fall after.
    • In that case, does Sadie having carried a letter between Nut and Geb count as Nice Job Breaking It, Hero given the Gaia's Vengeance of the new Olympians series?
      • No, because the Gaia's Vengeance is with a goddess, not a god. The Greek/Roman gods and the Egyptian gods seem to be totally different people.
      • The Heroes of Olympus shows that gods can have different aspects in other cultures, and that Mist keeps them apart as far as mortals are concerned. The Egyptian gods are probably extremely powerful monsters from the perspectives of the Greeks, but Nut, Geb, and their forced separation are almost exactly like the separation of Gaia and Ouranos. Apothis is rising, managed to manipulate even Set, and is trying to eat the world: why should he only be affecting one set of gods?
        • The Nut/Geb and Gaia/Ouranos separation isn't all that the same. Gaia gave her son (Kronos) a weapon so he could kill Ouranos. I don't see that happening with Nut and Geb. Gaia's Vengeance is because she hates the fact that the gods killed her children the titans. Other than that I agree, Apothis is probably the whole reason behind everything.
    • Drew and Lacy, daughters of Aphrodite, go to the same school as Sadie and the other magicians of Brooklyn House. Sadie comments that Lacy mentioned their 'summer camp' that they attended. She also mentions investigating reports of magic activity on Long Island.
  • Shipper on Deck: Sadie, to Carter and Zia
  • Shout-Out: To Percy Jackson, of course. 'Manhattan has other problems. Other gods. It's best we stay separate.'
    • There's also the incident where they meet Thoth, who complains about how he used to get confused with Hermes.
    • Carter also sees a winged horse that he thought was an illusion because of the magic security system. This Troper doesn't think so.
    • During a fight with some water demons in the Nile, Carter wishes to himself that he had the powers of a sea god.
    • Also to Doctor Who as one of Sadie's shabti was a thermos with googly eyes that yelled Exterminate! She was raised in England. Plus she mentions Jelly Babys later on.
    • And the other other work that involves cows with lasers is Gunnerkrigg Court.
    • Not sure if this is a proper shout-out, but Anubis wears Arcade Fire and The Dead Weather t-shirts.
    • Sadie listens to the music of Adele.
  • So Proud of You: Julius and Ruby at the end.
  • Magician School: The training of young magicians in the First Nome.
  • Khopesh And Sorcerer: Carter and Sadie are starting to look like this.
  • Team Mom: Bast.
  • Together in Death: Julius(Osiris) and Ruby Kane
  • Too Dumb to Live: Quite often, Sadie thinks this of her brother, ratherhypocritically.
  • Tsundere: Sadie is just Type A all the way, especially around Anubis.
  • Unexplained Recovery: Bast, in the end. Also....

Sadie: You got your head cut off?
Isis: I got better.

How Many Books In The Kane Chronicles

  • Unreliable Narrator: Each Kane sibling accuses the other of being this.
  • What Do You Mean It's Not Heinous?: Neith collects the pockets of her enemies.
  • Weirdness Censor: Magicians use simple, easy magic to change the appearance of things from mortals, who see what they think is real.
  • You Cannot Grasp the True Form: Apparently certain parts of the Duat will melt puny human senses.
  • You Monster!:
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