The red pyramid

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English

Description

The bestselling author of Percy Jackson and the Olympians takes on ancient Egypt in the first book of a trilogy that offers a modern-day portal into a rich fantastical world of ancient myth.“Fans of the Riordan magic--equal parts danger, myth, and irreverence--will embrace this new series with open arms.”—The Horn Book
  • #1 New York Times best-seller
  • Rick Riordan, a master at making mythology fun and relevant, takes on ancient Egypt
  • Told in two points of view, one male and one female
  • Combines witty, relatable heroes, gods and monsters, prophecies and curses, and non-stop action
  • Ideal for middle grade readers, but older readers will enjoy it, too
  • Soon to be adapted into a movie for Netflix, with Rick attached as producer
Since their mother’s death, Carter and Sadie have become near strangers. While Sadie has lived with her grandparents in London, her brother has traveled the world with their father, the brilliant Egyptologist, Dr. Julius Kane.One night, Dr. Kane brings the siblings together for a “research experiment” at the British Museum, where he hopes to set things right for his family. Instead, he unleashes the Egyptian god Set, who banishes him to oblivion and forces the children to flee for their lives.Soon, Sadie and Carter discover that the gods of Egypt are waking, and the worst of them--Set–has his sights on the Kanes. To stop him, the siblings embark on a dangerous journey across the globe -- a quest that brings them ever closer to the truth about their family, and their links to a secret order that has existed since the time of the pharaohs.

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Contributors
Collar, Orpheus Illustrator, Author
Free, Kevin R. narrator., nrt
Griffin, Matt Illustrator
Kellgren, Katherine narrator., nrt
Riordan, Rick Author
ISBN
9781423113386
9781423142492
9781441850959
9781423174677

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Also in this Series

  • The red pyramid (Kane chronicles Volume 1) Cover
  • The throne of fire (Kane chronicles Volume 2) Cover
  • The serpent's shadow (Kane chronicles Volume 3) Cover
  • Brooklyn House magician's manual: your guide to Egyptian gods & creatures, glyphs & spells, and more (Kane chronicles Volume 4) Cover

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Similar Series From Novelist

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for series you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
In each of these fast-paced, witty, mythology-rooted series for younger teens, a brother-and-sister team is learning to harness newly discovered magical powers -- but they'd better be quick about it, as the fate of the world rests with them. -- Ellen Foreman
Fantasy fans will be thrilled by the relentless action and suspense in these fast-paced stories about modern teens caught up in the epic struggles of gods and monsters from Indian and Egyptian mythology. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Both of these action-packed, plot-driven series have boy and girl protagonists wielding ancient Egyptian magic to reunite their familes and defeat secret societies with evil intents. Book of the Dead adds an online game element as well. -- Allie Jackson
Their characters and setups are quite different, but both of these tween fantasy series provide plenty of high-octane action, genuinely scary moments, magical warfare, complex storylines...and some pretty funny parts to lighten the mood, too. -- Ellen Foreman
These series have the appeal factors action-packed, and they have the themes "dark lord," "quest for magical items," and "chosen one"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "mythological fiction"; and the subjects "siblings," "medusa (greek mythology)," and "cousins."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful and action-packed, and they have the themes "dark lord" and "chosen one"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "mythological fiction"; and the subjects "magic," "magic spells," and "kidnapping."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, action-packed, and fast-paced, and they have the theme "dark lord"; the genres "fantasy fiction" and "mythological fiction"; and the subjects "magic," "magic spells," and "demigods."
These series have the theme "dark lord"; the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "magic," "siblings," and "magic spells."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, action-packed, and fast-paced, and they have the themes "dark lord" and "chosen one"; the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "magic," "magic spells," and "dragons."
These series have the appeal factors suspenseful, fast-paced, and intricately plotted, and they have the theme "dark lord"; the genre "fantasy fiction"; and the subjects "magic," "magic spells," and "preteen girls."

Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
NoveList recommends "Skulduggery Pleasant" for fans of "Kane chronicles". Check out the first book in the series.
Readers who are looking for fast-paced, contemporary fantasy stories with plenty of action and suspense will enjoy either of these books, each with boy and girl protagonists and scary, vengeful beings from history. -- Beth Gerall
Both of these fast-paced adventure stories center around missing family members (Pyramid) or friends (Medusa), where every clue matters and lives hang in the balance. -- Beth Gerall
Both of these fast-paced, action-packed, exciting and funny books about smart and daring tween leads in possession of mystical powers have enchanted Egyptian artifacts, London locations, secret societies and end-of-the world scenarios. -- Julie Corsaro
The iron ring - Alexander, Lloyd
Blending magic and mythology (in The Iron Ring, that of India; in The Red Pyramid, Egyptian) with ample humor, these are both great fantasy adventures. -- Ellen Foreman
Troubletwisters: the beginning - Nix, Garth
The explosive beginnings to both of these action-packed, fast-paced fantasies find a brother and sister who are unceremoniously shipped off under strange circumstances and left to discover their own emerging powers, which they must use to battle evil. -- Beth Gerall
In both of these action-packed, plot-driven series openers, ancient Egyptian magic is released, and young people must harness its power for good. -- Allie Jackson
NoveList recommends "Ash Mistry chronicles" for fans of "Kane chronicles". Check out the first book in the series.
Although Pyramid is a fantasy and Rover more realistic, both feature brother-sister teams trying to rescue parents. The siblings, who argue constantly, face danger and political intrigue in a series of fast-paced adventures and travels. -- NoveList Contributor
Although Mutiny is set on a future earth and Red Pyramid is contemporary fantasy, both books have young teens drawn into conflicts with powerful, secretive historical forces. These fast-paced adventures with plenty of action are sure to please. -- Beth Gerall
The forbidden stone - Abbott, Tony
Short chapters, smart kids and lightning-fast action will draw in readers who enjoy suspenseful stories involving good vs. evil. The Red Pyramid weaves Egyptian mythology into the action. -- Kathy Stewart
Try a Harry Potter read-alike for stories about heroes of mysterious birth, strange new worlds, supernatural creatures, spells and enchanted objects, and the eternal struggle between good and evil. -- NoveList Contributor

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
Both Rick Riordan and Philip Pullman write clever, engaging fantasy fiction for older kids. These authors weave humor and suspense into action-packed plots to create attention-grabbing stories. Many of the authors' books are informed by historical periods (Ancient Greece or Victorian England, respectively). -- NoveList Contributor
Kids and tweens who crave non-stop action, imaginative world-building, and lightning-paced reads should appreciate these authors' witty and suspenseful fantasy series. Both authors are skilled at grabbing -- and holding -- readers' attention. -- Ellen Foreman
Readers craving fast-paced adventures with a mythological twist will love the writings of Rick Riordan and Michael Scott. Both authors create relatable characters that find themselves in worlds where magic and mythology come to life. Riordan's novels are good for middle grades and up, while Scott writes for teen readers. -- Diane Colson
In the page-turning fantasy series by both of these authors, modern kids and teens are drawn into the epic (and often dangerous) dramas of ancient gods and mythological monsters. Both authors offer snarky humor and diverse, relatable casts of characters. -- Rebecca Honeycutt
Fans of action-packed fantasy for older kids inspired by mythology will enjoy the works of Rick Riordan and Jennifer Cervantes. Cervantes' books are inspired by Maya legends, while Riordan draws on stories from several different cultures. -- Stephen Ashley
Intricate plots, large casts of characters, and fast-paced action are hallmarks of both of these authors' fantasy fiction for older kids and tweens. Add in abundant wit, humor, and creative world-building, and it's no surprise these authors are so popular. -- Ellen Foreman
Both authors feature likable characters with a penchant for sarcasm who engage in action-packed, suspenseful adventures laced with fantasy. Jonathan Stroud writes books for all ages, but his middle-grade books will appeal to fans of Rick Riordan. Riordan's milieu is mythological fantasy, while Stroud features the magical and supernatural. -- Diane Colson
Each author captures the experiences of ordinary boys undertaking extraordinary adventures in otherworldly realms. Rick Riordan is well known for his mythology-based, action-packed series, while Anthony Horowitz sends his courageous teen heroes into inventive spy fiction and suspenseful horror stories. -- Diane Colson
Both authors write action-packed, suspenseful stories featuring courageous teenagers. Rick Riordan's fantasy novels for middle grades are steeped in mythology, while Pittacus Lore's teen books involve alien encounters, but both explore the power of friendship and the danger of accepting a quest. -- Diane Colson
Teenagers entrusted with dangerous quests figure prominently in both authors' work. Rick Riordan writes fast-paced fantasy that features ordinary people and mythological characters. His tone is funny and suspenseful. Rick Yancey's books are also action-packed adventures, but they can be more gruesome and bleak in tone. -- Diane Colson
These authors' works have the genre "mythological fiction"; and the subjects "demigods," "gods and goddesses, greek," and "jackson, percy (fictitious character)."
These authors' works have the appeal factors action-packed, and they have the genre "mythological fiction"; and the subjects "quests," "monsters," and "prophecies."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Since their mother's death, six years ago, 12-year-old Sadie Kane has lived in London with her maternal grandparents while her older brother, 14-year-old Carter, has traveled the world with their father, a renowned African American Egyptologist. In London on Christmas Eve for a rare evening together, Carter and Sadie accompany their dad to the British Museum, where he blows up the Rosetta Stone in summoning an Egyptian god. Unleashed, the vengeful god overpowers and entombs him, but Sadie and Carter escape. Initially determined to rescue their father, their mission expands to include understanding their hidden magical powers as the descendants of the pharaohs and taking on the ancient forces bent on destroying mankind. The first-person narrative shifts between Carter and Sadie, giving the novel an intriguing dual perspective made more complex by their biracial heritage and the tension between the siblings, who barely know each other at the story's beginning. The first volume in the Kane Chronicles, this fantasy adventure delivers what fans loved about the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series: young protagonists with previously unsuspected magical powers, a riveting story marked by headlong adventure, a complex background rooted in ancient mythology, and wry, witty twenty-first-century narration. The last pages contain a clever twist that will leave readers secretly longing to open their lockers at the start of school.--Phelan, Carolyn Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

This fun, if formulaic, start to the Kane Chronicles series opens with a signature Riordan move: an explosion. Siblings Carter and Sadie have been living apart since their mother's mysterious death. On Christmas Eve, archeologist Julius Kane and son Carter, 14, show up in England for one of their two days a year with Sadie. Julius ushers his children to the British Museum, where he blows up the Rosetta Stone, unleashing five Egyptian gods and causing his own disappearance. The kids' Uncle Amos whisks them to a Brooklyn mansion, where he reveals that the Kanes descend from powerful Egyptian magicians. Swap Egyptian mythology for Percy Jackson's Greek gods and you've got the best part of this-an ancient history lesson seamlessly unfurled in a rip-roaring adventure. Told in alternating chapters by Carter and Sadie, the novel begins with a warning that the book is a "transcript of a digital recording," a distracting gimmick, and the attempts to make Sadie sound English by dropping in British slang are intermittent. Despite those flaws, Riordan delivers another funny yarn with kids in the lead and animal sidekicks that nearly steal the show. Ages 9-12. (May) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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School Library Journal Review

Gr 4-9-Riordan takes the elements that made the "Percy Jackson" books (Hyperion) so popular and ratchets them up a notch. Carter, 14, and Sadie, 12, have grown up apart. He has traveled all over the world with his Egyptologist father, Dr. Julius Kane, while Sadie has lived in London with her grandparents. Their mother passed away under mysterious circumstances, so when their father arrives in London and wants to take them both on a private tour of the British Museum, all is not necessarily what it seems. The evening ends with the apparent destruction of the Rosetta Stone, the disappearance of Dr. Kane, and the kidnapping of Carter and Sadie. More insidiously, it leads to the release of five Egyptian gods, including Set, who is their mortal enemy. Carter and Sadie discover the secrets of their family heritage and their ability to work magic as they realize that their task will be to save humanity from Set, who is building a destructive red pyramid inside Camelback Mountain in Phoenix. The text is presented as the transcript of an audio recording done by both children. Riordan creates two distinct and realistic voices for the siblings. He has a winning formula, but this book goes beyond the formulaic to present a truly original take on Egyptian mythology. His trademark humor is here in abundance, and there are numerous passages that will cause readers to double over with laughter. The humor never takes away from the story or from the overall tone. A must-have book, and in multiple copies.-Tim Wadham, St. Louis County Library, MO (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Horn Book Review

Siblings Carter and Sadie Kane are plunged into a world of Egyptian gods and monsters when their father, secretly a powerful magician and descendant of the pharaohs, disappears after a failed spell blows up the Rosetta Stone and summons five gods into the mortal world. Fleeing assassination orders from the underground House of Life, the brother and sister begin to discover their new powers-to read hieroglyphics, to work spells using Divine Words, to create ghostly avatars to help them in combat-and soon learn that Carter is host to Horus, god of war, while Isis, goddess of wisdom, has manifested in Sadie. Under attack from magicians, monsters, and crocodile gods alike, and hoping to rescue their father from Set, god of chaos, the Kanes must find a way to banish the chaos god before he destroys all of North America. Similar in concept to the author's best-selling Percy Jackson books, the new series relies lightly on formula, here invoking Egyptian (rather than Greek) mythology and culture in a story driven by wisecracking adolescents in the modern world. Refreshingly for fantasy, Carter and Sadie are biracial; nicely individuated with honest, compelling voices, they share the duties of narration, while the action hits its stride in the second chapter and never lets up. Fans of the Riordan magic-equal parts danger, myth, and irreverence-will embrace this new series with open arms. From HORN BOOK, (c) Copyright 2010. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* Since their mother's death, six years ago, 12-year-old Sadie Kane has lived in London with her maternal grandparents while her older brother, 14-year-old Carter, has traveled the world with their father, a renowned African American Egyptologist. In London on Christmas Eve for a rare evening together, Carter and Sadie accompany their dad to the British Museum, where he blows up the Rosetta Stone in summoning an Egyptian god. Unleashed, the vengeful god overpowers and entombs him, but Sadie and Carter escape. Initially determined to rescue their father, their mission expands to include understanding their hidden magical powers as the descendants of the pharaohs and taking on the ancient forces bent on destroying mankind. The first-person narrative shifts between Carter and Sadie, giving the novel an intriguing dual perspective made more complex by their biracial heritage and the tension between the siblings, who barely know each other at the story's beginning. The first volume in the Kane Chronicles, this fantasy adventure delivers what fans loved about the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series: young protagonists with previously unsuspected magical powers, a riveting story marked by headlong adventure, a complex background rooted in ancient mythology, and wry, witty twenty-first-century narration. The last pages contain a clever twist that will leave readers secretly longing to open their lockers at the start of school. Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2009 Booklist Reviews.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

This fun, if formulaic, start to the Kane Chronicles series opens with a signature Riordan move: an explosion. Siblings Carter and Sadie have been living apart since their mother's mysterious death. On Christmas Eve, archeologist Julius Kane and son Carter, 14, show up in England for one of their two days a year with Sadie. Julius ushers his children to the British Museum, where he blows up the Rosetta Stone, unleashing five Egyptian gods and causing his own disappearance. The kids' Uncle Amos whisks them to a Brooklyn mansion, where he reveals that the Kanes descend from powerful Egyptian magicians. Swap Egyptian mythology for Percy Jackson's Greek gods and you've got the best part of this—an ancient history lesson seamlessly unfurled in a rip-roaring adventure. Told in alternating chapters by Carter and Sadie, the novel begins with a warning that the book is a "transcript of a digital recording," a distracting gimmick, and the attempts to make Sadie sound English by dropping in British slang are intermittent. Despite those flaws, Riordan delivers another funny yarn with kids in the lead and animal sidekicks that nearly steal the show. Ages 9–12. (May)

[Page 51]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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School Library Journal Reviews

Gr 4–9—Riordan takes the elements that made the "Percy Jackson" books (Hyperion) so popular and ratchets them up a notch. Carter, 14, and Sadie, 12, have grown up apart. He has traveled all over the world with his Egyptologist father, Dr. Julius Kane, while Sadie has lived in London with her grandparents. Their mother passed away under mysterious circumstances, so when their father arrives in London and wants to take them both on a private tour of the British Museum, all is not necessarily what it seems. The evening ends with the apparent destruction of the Rosetta Stone, the disappearance of Dr. Kane, and the kidnapping of Carter and Sadie. More insidiously, it leads to the release of five Egyptian gods, including Set, who is their mortal enemy. Carter and Sadie discover the secrets of their family heritage and their ability to work magic as they realize that their task will be to save humanity from Set, who is building a destructive red pyramid inside Camelback Mountain in Phoenix. The text is presented as the transcript of an audio recording done by both children. Riordan creates two distinct and realistic voices for the siblings. He has a winning formula, but this book goes beyond the formulaic to present a truly original take on Egyptian mythology. His trademark humor is here in abundance, and there are numerous passages that will cause readers to double over with laughter. The humor never takes away from the story or from the overall tone. A must-have book, and in multiple copies.—Tim Wadham, St. Louis County Library, MO

[Page 118]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.

Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.
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