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Artemis Fowl (Artemis Fowl, Book 1)

Artemis Fowl (Artemis Fowl, Book 1)

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.19
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Artemis Fowl a review by Valery
Review: If you liked the Harry Potter books, you will to read like this book. In the book, Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer, the protagonist, a 12 year-old boy who is trying to get his family fortune back. He has found a magic book that he needs to translate. Every one in his family had tried to translate it...he was the first. Artemis needed the book to create a whole new group of creatures for which he can get the gold.
One of my favorite excerpts from the book is when Artemis finds a person who looks like a waiter; he defines what is wrong about the waiter, and makes him give Artemis his real identity. I like that excerpt because it shows that Artemis can figure out whether someone is what he or she say they are..
Another one of my favorite excerpts is when Artemis makes a copy of the magic book. He goes home to translate the book on the computer...and succeeds. I liked this excerpt because everybody in his family tried to find the book and translate it and none of them did except Artemis.
Ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls of all ages, I strongly encourage you to read Artemis Fowl by Eoin Colfer. And again, if you liked the Harry Potter books (at least one of them) then you will definitely like this one!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: good
Review: This is a great book, for kids and adults alike. It is very easy to read, and extremely enjoyable. Colfer creates a wonderfuly delightful world, with good characters

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing
Review: Definitely amazing. An excellent book. Full of action and high-tech machines. A must-read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great book!
Review: It was a good book. I couldn't put it down! I thought it was a really good book. It was very intersting since the main chacter was a good guy, instead of a bad guy. They also had fairies. It was excellent.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: "an epic novel that you can't stop reading" by:bvd grade5
Review: Artemis Fowl is a 12 year old genius,and has a butler who helps him complete his evil schemes. In the beggining of this novel Artemis Fowl tries to steal"The Book"which is a book that belongs to the Fairies and tells up to the deepest darkest secrets of the fairies. Artemis' scheme was to capture a fairy and hold it for ransom,he would ask for 1 ton of 24 karot gold. Later on he catches a fairy. Unfortunately for Artemis the fairy he caught was part of the L.E.P. The L.E.P. is like the F.B.I.just with exponential years in the future technology.
This book is a page turner. I would recommend this book to anyone.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: INGENIOUS
Review: EION COLFER REALLY HIT IT BIG TIME WITH THE ARTEMIS FOWL SERIES! THE BOOKS ARE ABOUT A 12- YEAR OLD CRIMINAL MASTERMIND ON A HUNT TO BRING BACK HIS FATHER, FAMILY FORTUNE, AND MOTHER BACK TO REALITY. WHILE ABDUCTING THE FAIRY OFFICER, HOLLY SHORT, HE MAKES WISE DECISIONS AND IS SURE FOR A GOOD LAUGH IN THE END IF YOU PAY ATTENDTION TO IT ENOUGH.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: My expert Review
Review: I would recommend Artemis Fowl by: Eoin Colfer to people 10 and up. It has some violence and isn't the easiest thing to understand. The book is very intriging, though, and you just don't want to put it down. One thing I like is that if Artemis has a plan, it doesn't reveal it until it's happening. That way, you see what a genius the kid really is. He does quite a good job of counteracting the fairies plans, even with inferior technology, being outnumbered greatly and the enemy having magic. The interesting thing is the fact that the faries' magic gives him an advantage, it "restricts" them in ways.
Artemis is a twelve year-old genius as well as a criminal mastermind. I found, that I liked him right away because of just how evil he was. He manages to copy the fairy bible and uravel the secrets of the magical sub-terranian world of the Fairies, Sprites, Dwarfs, Goblins, Trolls, Centaurs and many other mystical creatures. All of the creatures are different than you'd think, not like the ones in old fairy tales. Anyway, Artemis' plan is to restore the family status back to billionare. He hopes to do that by stealing fairy gold. He then captures captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon and holds her hostage inside Fowl manor. The plan seems like it should work perfectly, and it would if it wasn't for one little detail-faries don't part with gold easily, which Artemis soon finds out!
I give this book 5 stars. It has such detail and is truly an in-depth story. I like the fact that you get to see the book from every character's point of view, not just Artemis'. That way, you get to know what's going on on both ends of the line. The book also has very riveting twists and turns. That's why I give Artemis Fowl by: Eoin Colfer five stars.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Blah! Blah!
Review: I know that many people like this book and I am sorry that I disagree. This book is mentioned by others as a series that is compatable with Harry Potter. I do not believe this to be true. First, he is a boy with an evil and manipulative side. Harry Potter is a good person who is learning about his powers. Attemis does not have powers but has great intelligence and a faithful servant by his side.

I do not like how he captures a fairy to get a book that he wants. I think that it was horrible to treat his mother the way he did too. The fact that his father is not present and he seems to be glad about it; is a horrible thought. While he is a brilliant boy with thorough schemes; this book is not very imaginative because there is no relation to dragging in the reader based upon reality.

I know that this is for an older child but I have read so many interesting books from the children's section. This I did not feel compelled to read any more. I know that if I disagree then I do not have to read another story. I will not continue with the negative review to save myself from others who disagree with me. I just cannot accept this as a must read. This is why I gave it 3 stars because I do appreciate that a young boy does possess such an intelligence and that Coifer had an interesting code on the bottom of each page to be deciphered.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Decent, but very flawed.
Review: Eoin Colfer, Artemis Fowl (Hyperion, 2001)

It seems inevitable in this post-Harry Potter kidlit landscape that someone would have had to come up with an anti-Harry, a creature as slimy and loathsome as that little Potter brat is good and pure. Eoin Colfer made a valiant attempt in Artemis Fowl. And while he steps in a major pothole along the way, in the general scheme of things he did a pretty good job.

Artemis Fowl is not your typical twelve-year-old. He is guarded by a mountain of a man wherever he goes (think Professor Toru Tanaka in a dark suit and shades), his father is missing and presumed dead, his mother is off her gourd, and-oh, yes-he's a brilliant criminal mastermind who aims to restore the wealth his family lost on the same trip where his father went missing. How does he aim to do this? By stealing fairies' gold. No, I kid you not. Fairies are real, and Fowl wants what they've got.

It's a great setup, and it's carried off relatively well. There are a few places where the pace bogs down, but for the most part it rolls along smoothly as Artemis gathers his information, goes about kidnapping a fairy, and hatches a plan within a plan within a plan that keeps her rescuers (and the readers) on their toes wondering what all he's on about. This is certainly readable enough, though there are points one gets to where putting the book down and going off to do things like eat or sleep seems manageable. (Compare to, say, Kathe Koja's kidlit, which will plague your dreams if you try to sleep before you finish the book.)

Where Colfer goes painfully wrong, as where most authors go painfully wrong when writing kidlit, is to break the first rule taught in every book ever written on kidlit and every course ever taught on kidlit. The rule goes, with some variations, "don't talk down to your audience." The problem doesn't exist just in kidlit, of course, and hundreds of thousands of useless books, both fiction and nonfiction, are published every year that assume the public is made up of blithering idiots. As true as this may be, it's also still true that one catches more flies with honey than with vinegar. If you're putting an environmentally conscious subtext in your book, showing an image of diseased dolphins is more than enough (and, in fact, the very brief description given is quite stomach-turning on its own, and would have been greatly effective had he ended the sermon there); when you've stated your case in images, there's no need to then go off on a mini-tangent that amounts to "if I leave it like that, you won't get it, so I'm going to explain that last bit for you to make sure you understand what I'm on about." It's insulting to the reader's intelligence, it distracts from the value of the book, and it destroys the pace, even if it's only one sentence of explanation. It's redundant. Colfer doesn't just wade in this muck pit once (which might have been forgivable), but he does it at various times throughout the novel. One gets the feeling at times this is what an adventure novel would sound like had it been written by Amiri Baraka or Joan Baez.

If you can stomach being preached to in the middle of an adventure novel, by all means, pick it up. If you bristle every time an author pauses to explain something to you, you're probably better off avoiding it...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Artemis Fowl
Review: Artemis Fowl
By Eoin Colfer

The main charactors In this book, are Artemis, Butler, Holly, Root, and Foaly, who are the humans and the LEP. The plot is, that Artemis trys to make a fortune off of Fairy gold, by stealing the book of the People, and by taking a LEPrecon member hostage. The setting is current time, and it various places. The theme is how a young boy who is a genius trys to make a fortune. I liked this book very much because it wasn't the kind of book that has a happily ever after ending. You can almost experience what is happeneing in the book, and can understand the charactors emotions. I would strongly recommend this book to anyone who even remotely wanted to read this.


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