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THE KANE CHRONICLES, BOOK ONE: THE RED PYRAMID
By: Rick Riordan
Disney Hyperion Books: New York
2010 (HC)
Several months ago I posted a review of an
archaeology-based novel for young readers (roughly ages 9-12) with the
promise of more in the future. Therefore, just in time for Holiday
shopping, I strongly urge parents, grandparents, loving aunts and uncles and
older siblings to consider a gift of Rick Riordan’s The Red Pyramid
for that special youngster on the Christmas gift list.
Author Riordan just recently completed the hugely
popular five-novel cycle of the adventures of Percy Jackson and the
Olympians, which, in a sense, up-dated Classical mythology. With The Red
Pyramid, listed as Book One of the Kane Chronicles, he has turned his
considerable talents to the equally rich, but less familiar world of
Egyptian mythology. His very compelling protagonists, 14 year old Carter
and 12 year old Sadie Kane, are the children of world-renowned Egyptologist
Julius Kane, an African American, and their British mother, Ruby, who had
died under very mysterious circumstances at the site of London’s Cleopatra’s
Needle some six years earlier. A bitter custody battle following Ruby’s
death resulted in Carter living the life of a gypsy as his father took him
on excavations in far-flung parts of the world and Sadie living with her
maternal grandparents in London.
Then one very fateful Christmas Eve, Carter and Sadie
are brought together to accompany their father on a most unusual tour of the
Egyptian Gallery of the British Museum and thus begins an epic adventure for
the two siblings. The children watch in horror as their father, in an
apparent attempt to “make things right,” brings forth a frightful
wraith-like figure, disappears in a fiery blast that destroys the famed
Rosetta Stone and leaves the Egyptian Gallery in shambles.
From under the noses of the London police, Carter and
Sadie are whisked off to New York City in a magical Egyptian ship made of
reeds. Their father’s mysterious brother, Uncle Amos, sets them up in a
fantastic mansion on the east bank of the East River in New York, and begins
to explain the mysteries behind their father’s disappearance and their
mother’s death years earlier. They learn that they are children of a most
ancient bloodline of Egyptian magicians known as the House of Life—they are
in fact descendants of pharaohs, the most powerful of magicians. Their
father had been attempting to conjure the god of the dead Osiris, who would
be able to raise his beloved Ruby from the dead. But the attempt failed and
now the five chief gods of the Egyptian pantheon—Osiris, Isis, Horus, Set
and Nephthys—have been set free. Of these, Set is the fiery demon god—the
Red Lord-- they witnessed in the British Museum. Sadie and Carter must
accept the challenge to defeat Set—and save their father and very possibly
the world—within five days—the Demon Days—that end the solar year.
What follows is a swashbuckling and madcap race across
America – from New York to Washington DC to Memphis (Tennessee)—and a battle
at Elvis’ graveside at Graceland!—to New Orleans and finally to Camelback
Mountain outside Phoenix, Arizona, where Set is directing the construction
of the Red Pyramid, which when completed, will allow him to lay waste to
North America.
This is a tale of great high adventure that is leavened
with wonderful comic relief. There is Khufu, the sidekick baboon who wears
a Lakers jersey and loves to play basketball; there is the protector
crocodile named Philip of Macedon in the New York mansion pool; there is the
impish shabti (a pint-size avatar servant that Sadie and Carter call
“Doughboy,” who prefers his Egyptian name,
“Supreme-Force-Who-Crushes-His-Enemies”; and there is Professor Thoth of the
University of Memphis (Tennessee) who is the embodiment of the Egyptian god
of wisdom but is more akin to Gyro Geargoose of “Ducktails” fame.
This is a delightful book, full of adventure and humor,
but brimming with information about the rich mythology of ancient Egypt.
Four trowels for Book One of the Kane Chronicles—maybe there be many more!
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