Reading Challenge: Eoin Colfer How Many You Can Read During Quarantine Make Productive?

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Reading Challenge: Eoin Colfer How Many You Can Read During Quarantine Make Productive? READING CHALLENGE: EOIN COLFER HOW MANY YOU CAN READ DURING QUARANTINE MAKE PRODUCTIVE? Please mail me the number of books you have read with the Titles given below. Email id : [email protected] ( Please write your name/class/section) Kindly add Book Reviews under the Titles. 1. Artemis Fowl Twelve-year-old genius Artemis Fowl is a brilliant criminal mastermind. If the rumours are true, he’s behind pretty much every major crime of the 20th century. But he makes a big mistake when he kidnaps a fairy, Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon Police Unit, while trying to steal a stash of fairy gold. These aren’t the fairies of bedtime stories. These fairies are armed and dangerous. And they don’t play by the rules… 2. Artemis Fowl and the Arctic Incident Someone has been supplying Class A illegal human power sources to the goblins. Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon Unit is sure that her arch-enemy, thirteen-year-old Artemis Fowl, is responsible. But is he? Artemis has his own problems to deal with: his father has been kidnapped and only a miracle will save him. Maybe this time a brilliant plan won’t be enough. Maybe this time Artemis needs help… Punchy, witty and power-packed, this second Artemis adventure sizzles with thrills! 3. Artemis Fowl and the Eternity Code Thirteen-year-old criminal mastermind Artemis Fowl has constructed a supercomputer from stolen fairy technology. In the wrong hands it could be deadly to humans and fairies alike. But there’s no need to worry! Artemis has a brilliant plan. Except that he’s just made a fatal mistake… Artemis storms back in a third adrenaline-packed adventure stuffed with lightning action to make your heart race! 4. Artemis Fowl and the Last Guardian Massively epic. Seriously thrilling. Artemis vs zombie fairies. They’re not alive. They’re dead. In his first quest, Artemis was shocked to learn that fairies were living. Now, in his ultimate mission, he faces evil fairies who are dead. Demonic pixie Opal Koboi has woken the spirits of enchanted fairy warriors buried in Fowl Manor. Deathless beings crackling with dark energy, buried by a wicked warlock ten thousand years ago. These Berserkers have not lost their hatred for humanity. Especially for one boy: Artemis Fowl. Take a ringside seat. This final battle is going to be a corker… 5. Artemis Fowl and the Lost Colony Hold your breath! Artemis Fowl, teenage arch- villain and fairy-hunter, is on a new mission – to save humankind! Until today, Artemis was the only human who knew that fairies existed. But now he has met his match. A second juvenile genius has realised that fairies do exist, and she is determined to trap one. Not just any fairy. A demon – the most human- hating species the universe has ever known. Only an ancient time-spell separates the demons from humankind. Now Artemis must race to prevent it from unravelling. If he fails, the bloodthirsty demons will wipe every human from the planet. Because that’s what demons live to do. One teen mastermind vs. a legion of ravenous demons. Can Artemis win this battle? .
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  • Artemis Fowl
    Artemis Fowl Written by Eoin Colfer Presentation by Charlotte Bishop Eoin Colfer- The Man Behind the Bestsellers . Eoin Colfer (pronounced Owen) grew up in Wexford, Ireland. He first developed a passion for writing in primary school, reading Viking books inspired by his history lessons at the time. In 2001 the first Artemis Fowl book was published and he was able to resign from teaching and concentrate fully on writing. There are 6 books in the series. He describes the series as “Die Hard with fairies.” . He now lives in Ireland with his wife and 2 children. The Characters . Artemis Fowl: A 12 year old, brilliant criminal mastermind who is determined to restore his family’s wealth no matter the cost. Butler: The bodyguard and “manservant” of Artemis who has been with him since birth. He is the brawn behind Artemis’s brain. Holly Short: A member of the elf/fairy community with the typical elf-like features. Despite her 3’ tall stature, she is the only female officer of the LEP (Lower Elements Police). She battles it out with Artemis to save her People’s fortune. Commander Julius Root: Holly’s short-tempered, cigar smoking boss. Although he hates to show it, he deeply cares for Holly in a fatherly way and will stop at nothing to help her. Foaly: A centaur who is a genius with technology. Thanks to his inventions, Holly is always one step ahead of the humans. The Settings . The book begins in the mysterious early twenty-first century Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. The book then describes the Lower Elements, a fictional underground universe.
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  • A Resource Guide to Use with Artemis Fowl
    A Resource Guide to use with Artemis Fowl Unit Created by Gay Miller Introduction When I began teaching in the Dark Ages, teaching standards were a dusty book on the shelf in the principal’s office. Few teachers knew they existed, and no one used them. At this time textbook companies determined what was taught and how the skills were taught. I decided to start creating book units because I simply wanted to teach my way. As you well know, teaching standards are now the most important resource teachers have. The standards have been updated and revised repeatedly to become a valuable tool. Each time the standards were revised, I revised the book units to reflect the changes. I am currently updating the units once again to incorporate the Common Core Standards. With each revision of the teaching standards, I only updated the books I was currently teaching. Because some books were moved to different grade levels by our school system and I dropped other books to make room for new, some of my book units were not revised and remain very basic. This is one of those units. I hope you will be able to use this as a supplemental resource. Gay Miller [email protected] 1 | P a g e Lesson Plans for Artemis Fowl Day 1 Vocabulary for Chapter 1 eminent - Of high rank, station, or quality; standing above others in character or attainment or reputation, noteworthy, distinguished, famous Page 21 - The Butlers had been serving the Fowls for centuries. It had always been that way. Indeed, there were several eminent linguists of the opinion that this was how the common noun had originated.
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  • Artemis Fowl and the Lost Colony
    NOT FOR SALE This PDF File was created for educational, scholarly, and Internet archival use ONLY. With utmost respect and courtesy to the author, NO money or profit will ever be made from this text or its distribution. for more e-books, visit www.intexblogger.com ARTEMIS FOWL is a child prodigy from Ireland who has dedicated his brilliant mind to criminal activities. When Artemis discovers that there is a fairy civilization below ground, he sees it as a golden opportunity. Now there is a whole new species to exploit with his ingenious schemes. But Artemis doesn't know as much as he thinks about the fairy People. And what he doesn't know could hurt him ... Books by Eoin Colfer ARTEMIS FOWL ARTEMIS FOWL AND THE ARCTIC INCIDENT ARTEMIS FOWL AND THE ETERNITY CODE ARTEMIS FOWL AND THE OPAL DECEPTION ARTEMIS FOWL AND THE LOST COLONY HALF MOON INVESTIGATIONS THE SUPERNATURALIST THE WISH LIST And for younger readers THE LEGEND OF SPUD MURPHY THE LEGEND OF CAPTAIN CROW'S FEET NEVER BEFORE HAS A CRIMINAL MASTERMIND RECEIVED SUCH PRAISE 'Wickedly brilliant' - Independent 'Fast-paced, tongue-in-cheek, with some laugh-out-loud jokes' – Sunday Times 'Folklore, fantasy and high-tech wizardry ... Hugely entertaining' – Observer 'Pacy, playful and very funny, an inventive mix of myth and modernity, magic and crime' - Time 'Golfer has the ability to make you laugh twice over: first in sheer subversive joy at the inventiveness of the writing, and again at the energy of the humour' - Sunday Times 'Full of action, weaponry, farting dwarves and Chandleresque one-liners' - Evening Standard 'A hectic fusion of real, imaginary and fairy gadgetry.
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  • The Fowl Twins Author
    Series: The Fowl Twins Title: The Fowl Twins Author: Eoin Colfer Imprint: Disney • HYPERION In-store date: 11/05/19 ISBN: 978-1-368-04375-5 Price: $18.99 US / $24.99 CAN E-book ISBN: 978-1-368-04910-8 Trim size: 5 1/4 x 7 13/16 Page count: 368 Ages: 10–14 Grades: 5–9 ATTENTION, READER: This is an uncorrected galley proof. It is not a finished book and is not expected to look like one. Errors in spelling, page length, format, etc., will be corrected when the book is published several months from now. Direct quotes should be checked against the final printed book. We are pleased to send this book for review. Please send two copies of any review or mention to: Disney Book Group Attn: Children’s Publicity Department 125 West End Avenue, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10023 [email protected] TRIM 5 1/4 X 7 13/16 TRIM 5 1/4 X 7 13/16 Other Books by Eoin Colfer Airman Benny and Omar Benny and Babe Half Moon Investigations The Supernaturalist The Wish List Iron Man: The Gauntlet Artemis Fowl Artemis Fowl Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident Artemis Fowl: The Eternity Code Artemis Fowl: The Opal Deception Artemis Fowl: The Lost Colony Artemis Fowl: The Time Paradox Artemis Fowl: The Atlantis Complex Artemis Fowl: The Last Guardian TRIM 5 1/4 X 7 13/16 W.A.R.P.: The Reluctant Assassin W.A.R.P.: The Hangman’s Revolution W.A.R.P.: The Forever Man Graphic Novels Artemis Fowl: The Graphic Novel Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident: The Graphic Novel Artemis Fowl: The Eternity Code: The Graphic Novel The Supernaturalist: The Graphic Novel And for Younger Readers Eoin Colfer’s The Legend of Spud Murphy Eoin Colfer’s The Legend of Captain Crow’s Teeth Eoin Colfer’s The Legend of the Worst Boy in the World TRIM 5 1/4 X 7 13/16 EOIN COLFER • HYPERION Los Angeles New York TRIM 5 1/4 X 7 13/16 Copyright © 2019 by Eoin Colfer All rights reserved.
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  • Twelve-Year-Old Criminal Mastermind, Artemis Fowl, Hatches an Ingenious
    Year Five English – Artemis Fowl Twelve-year-old criminal mastermind, Artemis Fowl, My name hatches an ingenious plot to steal all the gold in fairy land. Although a little dubious about the plan - indeed My class not even quite believing in the existence of fairies - his trusty bodyguard and companion, Butler, is on hand to help. However, they have not reckoned on Captain Holly Short, who as first female officer in the Lower Elements Police Reconnaissance unit, or LEPrecon, has much to prove. When she is kidnapped by Artemis, she is determined to stand her ground and protect the fairy secrets. Artemis Fowl – Criminally good! Name_______________________________ Day One WALT Ask relevant questions to extend our understanding ME CPA Examine what others think of Artemis State what we think makes a character ‘WICKED’ Discuss how the book might tell you more about Artemis’ personality GM Concentration Resilience Responsibility Curiosity Risk Creativity Cooperation Enjoyment Today you are going to be exploring what other people think of Artemis’ character. You may not have read any of “Artemis Fowl” yet but from reading the synopsis on the front cover of this booklet and the headlines on the next page you will begin to have an idea of who he is. Read through these headlines and then complete the task below. WILF 1 Select three words to say what these newspaper columnists think Artemis Fowl is like as a person Can you highlight or underline where you found the evidence for these words on the newspapers? Why did you choose these words? WILF 2 What do you think shows that a book character is thoroughly HORRIBLE? You might want to think of a baddie from another story that you know (Voldemort, Darth Vader, Evil Stepmother).
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  • Twelve-Year-Old Criminal Mastermind, Artemis Fowl, Hatches an Ingenious
    Year Six English – Artemis Fowl Twelve-year-old criminal mastermind, Artemis Fowl, My name hatches an ingenious plot to steal all the gold in fairy land. Although a little dubious about the plan - indeed My class not even quite believing in the existence of fairies - his trusty bodyguard and companion, Butler, is on hand to help. However, they have not reckoned on Captain Holly Short, who as first female officer in the Lower Elements Police Reconnaissance unit, or LEPrecon, has much to prove. When she is kidnapped by Artemis, she is determined to stand her ground and protect the fairy secrets. Artemis Fowl – Criminally good! Name ____________________ Monday, 8th June The novel is not set in a ‘real’ place. Although we would say it is set in modern times, very much like our own, we don’t actually have the People living below us. We are asked to imagine things that don’t exist. As we read, we build up a picture of the world of the novel. This lesson will develop your skill of picking out important information and drawing conclusions from it. What can we learn about this fictional world from this extract? WAGOLL I can learn about when the book is set. The technology that is mentioned such as ‘digital camera’ and ‘portable phone’ makes me believe that we are looking Butler took the tiny tome reverentially. The around 20 to 30 years bodyguard activated a compact digital ago. camera and began photographing each wafer-thin page of the Book. The process took several minutes. When he was finished, the entire volume was stored on the camera’s chip.
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  • Educator's Guide 2
    EDUCATOR'S GUIDE 2 NOW A MAJOR MOTION PICTURE FROM THE WALT DISNEY STUDIOS! ABOUT THE BOOK Twelve-year-old criminal mastermind Artemis Fowl has discovered a world belowground of armed and dangerous– and extremely high-tech–fairies. He kidnaps one of them, Holly Short, and holds her for ransom in an effort to restore his family’s fortune. But he may have underestimated the fairies’ powers. Is he about to trigger a cross-species war? ABOUT THE AUTHOR Eoin Colfer is the New York Times best-selling author of the Artemis Fowl series, Airman, The Supernationalist, The Wish List, Half Moon Investigations, Benny and Omar, Benny and Babe, and Eoin Colfer’s Legend of . books. He lives in Ireland with his wife and two children. To learn more about Eoin Colfer, visit his website at WWW.EOINCOLFER.COM. the• prophecies• of• ohm,• phlegm• pot• cleaner,• to• 3 CURRICULUM CONNECTIONS: READING, WRITING, AND RESEARCHING PRE-READING ACTIVITY As a pre-reading activity, have students complete an anticipation guide structured in the following manner: BEFORE AFTER READING READING STATEMENTS Adults always know the right way to approach and solve a problem. It is best to always be completely honest with those you hold dear. When in danger, it is best to play it safe rather than take a risk. Breaking the rules is justified if it's done to help another. Instruct students to complete the guide by placing a “+” sign in the box next to the statements for which they agree, and a “0” next to those for which they disagree.
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  • Artemis Fowl
    EOIN COLFER ARTEMIS FOWL VIKING 'STAY BACK, HUMAN. YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE DEALING WITH.' Twelve-year-old Artemis Fowl is a brilliant criminal mastermind. But even Artemis doesn't know what he's taken on when he kidnaps a fairy, Captain Holly Short of the LEPrecon Unit. These aren't the fairies of bedtime stories. These fairies are armed and they're dangerous. Artemis thinks he's got them just where he wants them, but then they stop playing by the rules... ARTEMIS FOWL is the book that caused a sensation months before it was even published. This exciting, original novel has captured the imagination of film companies, publishers, the press and readers all over the world. These are just a few of the reactions the book has had so far: 'Fantastic, exciting and completely original' 'It's fresh, it's funny and I read it in one sitting' 'One of the most original creations in contemporary writing' 'A brilliantly realized parallel world' 'The fairy tale has been redefined' 'Imaginative story, crazy to read, funny characters. It's cool!' 'It's so refreshing to have a different take on the fantasy genre' 'Quite simply out of this world' 2 EOIN COLFER was born and raised in Wexford, a seaside town in the south-east of Ireland. He began writing plays at an early age, forcing his unfortunate classmates to dress up as marauding Vikings when they would have preferred to be outdoors doing some real marauding. Browbeaten by constant encouragement from his family, Eoin continued to write as an adult.
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  • Artemis Fowl and the Atlantis Complex Eoin Colfer
    ________________________________ Opening extract from Artemis Fowl and the Atlantis Complex Written by Eoin Colfer Published by Puffin Books All Text is Copyright © of the Author and/or Illustrator Please print off and read at your leisure. www.artemisfowl.co.uk Chapter 1: Cold Vibes Vatnajökull, Iceland VATNAJÖKULL is the biggest glacier in Europe with an area of more than five thousand stark blue-white miles. It is for the most part uninhabited and desolate, and, for scientific reasons, the perfect place for Artemis Fowl to demonstrate to the fairy People how exactly he planned to save the world. Also, a little dramatic scenery never hurts a presentation. One part of Vatnajökull that does see human traffic is the Great Skua restaurant on the shores of the glacier lagoon, which caters to groups of ice tourists from May to August. Artemis had arranged to meet the proprietor at this closed for the season establishment very early on the morning of September first. His fifteenth birthday. Artemis steered his rented snowmobile along the lagoon’s rippling coastline where the glacier sloped into a black pool dotted with a crazy-paving pattern of broken ice plates. The wind roared around his head like an excited crowd in a stadium, carrying with it arrowheads of sleet that peppered his nose and mouth. The space was vast and unforgiving, and Artemis knew that to be injured alone on this tundra would lead to a quick and painful death – or at the very least abject humiliation before the popping flashes of the tourist season’s tail end, which was slightly less painful than painful death but lasted longer.
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  • Artemis Fowl; the Graphic Novel Eoin Colfer & Andrew Donkin
    Artemis Fowl; the Graphic Novel Eoin Colfer & Andrew Donkin Teacher’s Notes Written by Meghan Brunet “This story began several years ago at the dawn of the twenty­first century. Artemis Fowl had devised a plan to restore his family’s fortune. A plan that could topple civilizations and plunge the planet into a cross­species war. He was twelve years old at the time…” Introduction Artemis Fowl is an ideal text with which to introduce the graphic novel genre to a junior or middle secondary English class. Written by Eoin Colfer and Andrew Donkin (whose works include Batman: Legends of the Dark Knight), with art by Giovanni Rigano, the book presents the first of the six-book Artemis Fowl prose series in mesmerizing visual format. The novel blends ‘Top Secret’ government agency profiling documents and crime surveillance photographs with its comic-book panels, allowing readers to glimpse and digest elements of the plot and characters that add depth and intrigue to the unfolding storyline. The artists behind Artemis Fowl have created dark, cluttered and eerie worlds for both the human and magical realms. Seedy backstreets in Saigon are awash with sweltering heat, yellow smog and the scent of rice wine. Readers are taken deep underground to the fairy realm - presented in panels of blue and green, where goblins and other faceless creatures lurk in the shadows. For the first time we also get to see Fowl Manor – an imposing and isolated mansion where Artemis lives and plots, surrounded by wealth, weapons and suffocating darkness. The characters themselves, although archetypal in one sense, are never allowed to fall neatly or completely into their traditional stereotypes.
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  • The Persistence of Fairy Culture in Scotland, 1572-1703 and 1811-1927
    “What are ye, little mannie?”: The Persistence of Fairy Culture in Scotland, 1572-1703 and 1811-1927 Alison Marie Hight Thesis submitted to the faculty of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in History Danna Agmon (Co-Chair) David Cline (Co-Chair) Matthew Gabriele May 5, 2014 Blacksburg, VA Keywords: Scotland, fairy, national identity, cultural heritage, witchcraft, escapism, class culture “What are ye, little mannie?”: The Persistence of Fairy Culture in Scotland, 1572-1703 and 1811-1927 Alison Marie Hight ABSTRACT This thesis is a chronologically comparative study of fairy culture and belief in early modern and Victorian Scotland. Using fairy culture as a case study, I examine the adaptability of folk culture by exploring whether beliefs and legends surrounding fairies in the early modern era continued into the nineteenth and early twentieth as a single culture system, or whether the Victorian fairy revival was a distinct cultural phenomenon. Based on contextual, physical, and behavioral comparisons, this thesis argues the former; while select aspects of fairy culture developed and adapted to serve the needs and values of Victorian society, its resurgence and popularization was largely predicated on the notion that it was a remnant of the past, therefore directly linking the nineteenth century interpretation to the early modern. In each era, fairy culture serves as a window into the major tensions complicating Scottish identity formation. In the early modern era, these largely centered around witchcraft, theology, and the Reformation, while notions of cultural heritage, national mythology, and escapist fantasy dominated Victorian fairy discourse.
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  • Eoin Colfer's Magical Fairies
    2009:036 BACHELOR THESIS Eoin Colfer´s Magical Fairies The depiction of fairies in Artemis Fowl compared to folklore and other literature Sara Pettersson Luleå University of Technology Bachelor thesis English Department of Language and Culture 2009:036 - ISSN: 1402-1773 - ISRN: LTU-CUPP--09/036--SE Lower Elements Luleå university of technology 2009-01-15 Department of language and culture E0001S English 3 for teachers Student: Sara Pettersson Abstract The name fairy has been surrounded with mystery and excitement for as long as people have been telling stories about strange and supernatural beings from this world and others. This essay endeavours to find similarities and differences in the magic and portrayal of fairies created by a present day author, Eoin Colfer, compared to the fairies of Celtic legends and Victorian beliefs. In order to fully understand the length of Colfer‟s imagination his fairies will be compared to creations from a few of the fantasy genres biggest names; J.R.R Tolkien, James Barrie and William Shakespeare. In addition this essay aims to discover peculiarities and other distinguishing features in an advanced technological society living just a few kilometres below our feet, where the fairy residents do everything they can to keep mankind from knowing they exist. Luleå university of technology 2009-01-15 Department of language and culture E0001S English 3 for teachers Student: Sara Pettersson TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ..............................................................................................
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