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To work on list:

The Hidden Oracle[edit]

http://www.usatoday.com/story/life/books/2015/12/10/rick-riordan-exclusive-excerpt-the-trials-of-apollo-percy-jackson/76780734/

http://rrriordan.tumblr.com/post/136389211741/so-a-clarification-i-try-not-peg-the-pjo-world-to

Demigods and Magicians[edit]

Demigods of Olympus[edit]

Percy Jackson and the Singer of Apollo[edit]

https://www.buffalolib.org/vufind/Record/1894671/Reviews

https://www.kirkusreviews.com/book-reviews/jon-scieszka/other-worlds-scieszka/

Editor of the Week Template[edit]

Percy Jackson Task Force
Zussman1
 
Editor of the Week
for the week beginning November 8, 2015
With admirable drive and a willingness to cooperate with other users this editor (along with others) has revived the Percy Jackson Task-force.
Recognized for
being praiseworthy, devoted and striving to improve
Submit a nomination

Dvore House[edit]

Dvor House, 2014

The Dvore House is a National Heritage Site in Herzliya, Israel.

The Dvore House is the house in which Benjamin Dvore, his wife, Hannah Dvore, and their two daughters, Ziva and Sheila, resided. The house was supposedly built by Hannah Dvore's father in 1933. It resides in 20 Nordau St, Herzliya, Israel. The house is considered unique because of its large interior and yard, and because children came to the backyard to play every day after school. Today, this building is considered a landmark because of its unique architectural style and is currently set aside for preservation.[1]

Architectural Style[edit]

The house was built in an eclectic style of architecture, a style that was quite common in Israel during the 1920's. This style mixes an older style of architecture with a style that was considered modern during that time period. The house is predominantly modern, but also includes elements like turrets and arched windows that are older. The house has two floors, which in that time period, along with the bigger yard, made the house much larger than other houses of that time period.[2][1]

Residents[2][edit]

Dvore Family[edit]

The Dvore Family was very generous and supportive. One of several incidents such as these reports that they let a family with no place to stay live in the house for a while. The Dvore family also turned a few of the rooms into a market in order to make a living.

Benjamin Dvore[edit]

Benjamin Dvore was born on the 6th of May, 1913. When he was 11 years old, he immigrated to Israel with his parents from Vilna, Poland in May of 1925. They settled in Balfouria, in the valley near Afula, where they owned a farm. Unfortunately, mice, droughts and floods plagued them. Benjamin joined the Haganah and was a supply officer, a group leader, a guard, and commander. His wife, Hannah also served in the Haganah. In the year of 1930, when Benjamin turned 16, he moved to Herzliya Gimel, also known as West Herzliya. He worked in his uncle's, Ben Dvore, orchard, while his uncle built houses and paved roads in Herzliya. Benjamin sent money to his parents, who had stayed in Balfouria, whenever he could. Afterwards, Benjamin started working in construction. He was an excellent builder and soon started building in Herzliya Gimel and Herzliya Pituah. Additionally, he was a council member of Herzliya Gimel. Benjamin and Hannah moved to the United States in 1958 and returned to Israel in 1974.

Hannah Dvore[edit]

Hannah Dvore was born on April 14th, 1918 in Cleveland, Ohio. She immigrated to Israel in November, 1934. Hannah was in the Haganah with Benjamin. She took courses in First Aid and was a nurse in the Haganah.

Ziva Dvore[edit]

Ziva Dvore is the eldest child of Hannah and Benjamin Dvore. She was born in 1938.

Sheila Dvore Casdi[edit]

Sheila Dvore is the second child of Hannah and Benjamin Dvore. She was born in 1945 in Herzliya. She lived in the United States as an artist for ten years. Between 1968-1992 she lived in Tel Aviv and the Central District in Israel. She has lived in Afula since 1992. In 1963 she studied drawing and art in Fontainebleau, France. In 1967 she became an alumna of Kent State University in Ohio after receiving a Bachelor's Degree in art.[3]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b Bella Nachshon, personal communication, January 2015
  2. ^ a b Naor, Mordechai (1990). Book of Herzliya Pioneers (in Hebrew). Israel.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ "Israel Museum Information Center for Israeli Art - Artists' Information". www.imj.org.il. Retrieved 2015-08-12.

Sword of Summer[edit]

The Sword of Summer
AuthorRick Riordan
Cover artistJohn Rocco
SeriesMagnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard (Book 1)
GenreFantasy, Norse mythology, Young adult
PublisherDisneyHyperion Books
Publication date
October 6, 2015
Media typePrint (hardcover), digital (ebook), and audio (audiobook)
Pages497
ISBN978-1423160915
Followed byThe Hammer of Thor 

The Sword of Summer is a fantasy novel based on Norse mythology and the first installment of the Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard series. It was written by Rick Riordan. The plot follows the adventures of Magnus Chase, a 16-year-old demigod and homeless orphan.[1] After his death and arrival in the Norse afterlife, Magnus discovers that he is the son of the Norse deity, Frey, and must stop Fenris Wolf from escaping his prison and ending the world.

The Sword of Summer was published in October 2015 by Disney•Hyperion, an imprint of Disney Book Group. It has appeared on the New York Times children's Best Seller list and the USA Today Best Seller list. A sequel titled The Hammer of Thor was published October 2016[citation needed]. Reviewers such as Publishers Weekly have praised the book, saying, "Riordan plays much of the material for laughs...and brings the Norse gods into the 21st century... The sensibility is right in line with the Percy Jackson novels, and the audience will be just as large."[2]

Development[edit]

During Riordan's book tour for The House of Hades, he announced that he was writing a Norse mythology series that would take place in Boston. He also stated that his plans for the setting were unrelated to his recent move to the city, although living in Boston made researching for the series less difficult.[3] On September 23, 2014, Riordan broadcasted a webcast from the Empire State Building and announced the name of the series: Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard.[4] The title of the first book, The Sword of Summer, was revealed in the final page of The Blood of Olympus. On June 18, 2015, the cover and the second chapter were released on USA Today.[5] The first five chapters were revealed on September 28, 2015.[6] To prepare readers for the new book, Riordan posted images of Norse vocabulary words on his Twitter account starting August 28, 2015, along with the hashtag #norsecrashcourse. Words such as Valhalla, Ragnarok, and Yggdrasil were all included and defined.[7]

In the months preceding The Sword of Summer's publication, Disney-Hyperion and Rick Riordan advertised even more heavily for the new book. Riordan embarked on a tour across the U.S., speaking to hundreds of fans on each stop of his tour.[8][9][10][11] An online myth-writing competition was sponsored by Scholastic just before the novel's publication, with the grand prize of a "virtual visit" from Rick Riordan.[12] Finally, Riordan signed 10,000 copies of The Sword of Summer, to be distributed on Black Friday at Barnes & Noble stores nationwide, as yet another massive advertising campaign.[13]

Plot[edit]

The novel opens on January 13, the sixteenth birthday of the protagonist Magnus Chase, an orphan sleeping on the streets of Boston. He is awakened to find his family unexpectedly searching for him. After Magnus is found by his Uncle Randolph, the man drives him to the Longfellow Bridge and attempts to explain that the Norse not only visited the Boston area in medieval times, but actually believed it the location of their mythological center of the world (the "world tree", Yggdrasil). He also claims Magnus is the son of a Norse god. At the bridge, Magnus is astonished to be able to telekinetically retrieve an ancient sword (Sumarbrander, or the "Sword of Summer") hidden in Boston Harbor. A fire giant known as Surt appears demanding the sword, and begins to destroy the bridge. Magnus attacks Surt to allow other pedestrians time to escape. As he realizes that he is about to die, he manages to wound the demon and hurl the two of them off the bridge. He dies on impact with the water.

Magnus awakens in a place called Hotel Valhalla, where he is told he will now reside as an einherjar, training for the day of Ragnarök (the world's end). He is introduced to a Valkyrie named Sam who brought him to Valhalla, and to his new warrior hallmates. Magnus's worthiness is questioned even after the three Norns arrive to pronounce him Frey's son and deliver a mysterious prophecy. That night, his friends Blitz and Hearth arrive and convince him to look for Sumarbrander in Boston. They later encounter Sam, who decides to help them. The group then meets with the god Mimir, who tasks them with finding the Sword before Surt and bringing it to the island of the Fenris Wolf. They retrieve the sword from the sea goddess Ran, and journey to Nidavellir. There Magnus learns a great deal about his companions' difficult pasts, and retrieves a new binding for Fenrir. After a detour to Jotunheim, where they help the god Thor and Magnus discovers new magical powers, they return to Boston. Magnus experiences dream-visions of Loki, and once even of the goddess Hel, who offers to reunite him with his late mother -- a proposal he struggles to refuse.

They finally arrive at the island of the Fenris Wolf. Despite being attacked by a group of Valkyries, some of their own hallmates, and Surt, they successfully rebind the wolf. The battle is finally won once the Valhalla residents choose to change sides, though the Valkyries are killed and Magnus nearly dies from the effort of healing Halfborn Gunderson. He has a brief vision of his father Frey before returning to Hotel Valhalla to stand trial for his disobedience. Before he can be punished, however, Magnus's hallmate X stands and reveals himself to be the god Odin, in disguise. Odin rewards each of the heroes in turn, finally offering Magnus a chance to leave Valhalla for a different afterlife or even the mortal world. Magnus declines, and returns to Boston to speak with his cousin Annabeth. They scatter Magnus's mother's ashes in the Blue Hills south of Boston, one of his mother's favorite places, and exchange stories of each others' lives as demigods.

The novel ends with an epilogue, in which Uncle Randolph is punished by Loki for not being able to stop Magnus from rebinding Fenrir. Loki implies that Randolph's family will be in danger if the man does not cooperate.[1]

Prophecy[edit]

The prophecy that was given to Magnus by the Norns reads:

Wrongly chosen, wrongly slain,
A hero Valhalla cannot contain.
Nine days hence the sun must go east,
Ere Sword of Summer unbinds the beast.[1]

The first line of the prophecy was initially taken as confirmation that Magnus was unfit for duty as an einherjar; later, Odin interprets it to mean that Loki chose the wrong hero to manipulate. The second line refers to how Magnus manages to leave Valhalla despite claims that the hotel is impossible to escape. The final two lines describe how Jack (Sumarbrander) was fated to free Fenris, and how the one day of the year where Fenris can be reached by a mortal would happen exactly nine days from the time the prophecy was given.[1]

Characters[edit]

  • Magnus Chase - A 16-year-old son of Frey who dies in the first few chapters but becomes an einherjar. He is Annabeth Chase's cousin, but last saw her when he was very young. He has healing and regeneration powers, resistance to extreme temperatures, and other magical abilities. As a human, he was asthmatic and weak, but gains extreme strength and endurance after his death.[1]
  • Samirah Al-Abbas (Sam) - The Valkyrie who brought Magnus to Hotel Valhalla. A daughter of Loki, she emigrated from Iraq with her family and is descended from a medieval Arab traveler and historian who wrote an important account about living among the Vikings. She is stripped of her powers as a Valkyrie as a result of her choice to make Magnus an einherjar, but is reinstated by Odin himself. She is a practicing Muslim. She is a shapeshifter and carries an ax and a green hijab, which doubles as a camouflage cloak. She is engaged to her second cousin, Amir Fadlan, who works in a falafel shop.[1]
  • Hearthstone (Hearth) - A friend of Magnus. He is an alf (elf). He is deaf-mute, but speaks Alf Sign Language and can read lips. He had an abusive childhood, with parents who disliked him because of his disabilities. In exchange for working for Mimir, he received the ability to work rune magic.[1]
  • Blitzen (Blitz) - Another friend of Magnus, a svartalf (dwarf). He is the son of Freya. He and Hearth watched over Magnus while he was living in the streets. Blitz's father was killed by Fenris when he was a child, after an attempt to replace the Fenris Wolf's bindings. Blitz is unskilled at crafting (unusual for dwarves) but is a master fashion advisor. He, like Hearth, once worked for Mimir.[1]
  • Gunilla - The former head Valkyrie; extremely dedicated and experienced. She is killed by Surt at the end of the book.[1]
  • Mallory Keen - One of Magnus' hallmates; a red-haired woman who speaks with an Irish accent and is said to have died attempting to disarm a car bomb. She has a crush on Halfborn Gunderson.[1]
  • Thomas Jefferson, Jr. (TJ) - One of Magnus' hallmates; an African-American native of Boston and a Union soldier in the American Civil War. A son of Tyr and a woman who fled slavery, TJ arrived at Valhalla in 1863 after dying in the Second Battle of Fort Wagner, South Carolina.[1]
  • Halfborn Gunderson - One of Magnus' hallmates, who died during a Viking invasion of England in medieval times. He has a PhD. in German literature.[1]
  • X/Odin - A half-troll that is one of Magnus' hallmates, X is later revealed to be Odin in disguise, in order to inspect the einherjar without them knowing. Sam brought X to Valhalla when he died dismantling a dog-fighting ring. He is called X because his real name is difficult to pronounce.[1]
  • Jack/Sumarbrander - The title character of the book (Sumerbrander is Norse for "sword of summer"), a magic sword that can talk and once belonged to Frey until he gave it up and lost its allegiance. Magnus retrieved it from Boston Harbor, won its allegiance, and nicknamed it Jack. Jack occasionally speaks in Spanish and uses slang. He can take the form of a pendant and move on his own.[1]

Publication[edit]

It was released on October 6, 2015 with a first printing of 2.5 million hardcover copies in the U.S..[14] Many publishers in other countries - including Puffin Books in the UK - released hardcover editions on October 6th, or shortly thereafter.[15] Ebook editions were published worldwide on the same date, available through the print edition publishers or ebook distributors such as Kindle.[15] An audiobook was released October 6 by Listening Library in the U.S., with a similar edition released by Penguin Random House Audio in the UK. An audiobook in German was released in 2016.[15]

To date, editions have been published in English, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, French, Polish, Turkish, Dutch, Bulgarian, and Finnish. The majority of foreign-language editions have been published with the same U.S. cover art, but a few boast unique illustrations not done by illustrator John Rocco.[15]

Reception[edit]

The Sword of Summer has been very well received since its publication. Maggie Reagan of Booklist admonished readers and booksellers to "buy extra copies, and prepare for the siege. ...Riordan has the magic touch..."[16] It debuted as number one on the New York Times Children's Middle Grade Hardcover Best Sellers list and has remained there for 36 weeks as of June 30, 2016.[17][18] It was also #3 on Amazon's best-selling Children's Books list for 2015.[19] School Library Journal explained why with its comment: "With an epic plot, engaging (and diverse) characters, and tons of wise-cracking humor, Riordan’s latest is a page turner. ...fans of his previous works will [also] be happy to see clever nods and references to the other in-universe books."[20] While reviewer Jody Mitori said Riordan's pop culture "references may date the book in years to come", she went on to assert that "for now, they make the trek entertaining".[21] Among overall children's book sales in 2015, The Sword of Summer did very well, but was not a "big front-runner" among other bestselling books.[22]

The Sword of Summer has been praised especially as an excellent example of a Riordan novel. Kirkus Reviews, for example, wrote, "First there were the Greek gods, then the Egyptian gods, then the Roman gods—now Riordan takes on the Norse gods. ...A fast-paced, eventful, and largely successful pivot."[23] More specific aspects of the novel have also been noted by critics. Author Cassandra Clare's review, praised "Riordan's effervescent world-building", in addition to the novel's humor and breakneck plot.[1] Author Michael Grant lauded the novel as "a propulsive, kinetic, witty rebooting of Norse mythology with all the charm of the Percy Jackson novels."[1] Kidsreads's review praised the characters and their development, saying "Magnus Chase feels fresh and exciting" even with its oft-used mythological themes.[24]

A few reviews -- most notably Adam Gopnik's in The New York Times -- have expressed disappointment at the novel's failing to rise above Riordan's previous work, however.[25][26][21] Gopnik's review acknowledged the difficulties modern-myth authors like Riordan face in writing for a young audience; such as the "required" action scenes, fantastic powers, and drama; but went on to question Riordan's inadequate portrayal of "the special quiddity that separates Norse mythology from other kinds...its fatalism". A similar review from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch asserted that "at nearly 500 pages, Sword of Summer is too long" and loses some of its charm from the overuse of "quests-within-a-quest".[21] While Gopnik and others accept The Sword of Summer as of passable quality and certain to appeal to many readers, Gopnik summarizes their views in his review's concluding lines: "The marvels of myth Riordan recreates here as before; the mystery of myth remains unactualized in his work or, sadder and more likely, unasked for by his time."[26]

On a more positive note, some critics appreciated Riordan's new turn towards multiculturalism.[27][28][29] Other reviewers have shown interest in Riordan's choice to kill his main character and other signs of his newest story being more mature than the famous Percy Jackson & the Olympians.[29][28] Kirkus praised Riordan's interesting choice to make the main female protagonist, Samirah al-Abbas, happily betrothed -- and thus "blessedly free of romantic tension" with Magnus.[23]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Riordan, Rick (2015). The Sword of Summer. Disney-Hyperion. ISBN 978-1423160915.
  2. ^ "Children's Book Review: The Sword of Summer by Rick Riordan. Disney-Hyperion, $19.99 (512p) ISBN 978-1-4231-6091-5". PublishersWeekly.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  3. ^ Tilak, Visi (January 26, 2014). "'Percy Jackson' author Rick Riordan on moving to Boston". The Boston Globe. Retrieved December 22, 2015.
  4. ^ Riordan, Rick (2014-09-24). "Myth & Mystery: Magnus Chase!". Myth & Mystery. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  5. ^ "Read an excerpt from new Rick Riordan". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  6. ^ "Magnus Chase first 5 chapters". Issuu. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  7. ^ "Myth & Mystery - To get you ready for Magnus Chase, a..." rrriordan.tumblr.com. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  8. ^ Riordan, Rick (September 14, 2015). "Sword of Summer Tour Dates". RickRiordan.com News. Rick Riordan. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  9. ^ Riordan, Rick (2015-10-02). "Myth & Mystery: Sword of Summer tour update". Myth & Mystery. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  10. ^ Mitori, Jody (October 14, 2015). "Hundreds of young fans greet Rick Riordan at St. Louis County Library". St. Louis Post-Dispatch Book Blog. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  11. ^ Simpson, Collin (October 13, 2015). "Fantasy fiction writer comes to Miami". FIU Student Media. Florida International University. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  12. ^ Bryant, Roger (February 5, 2016). "National writing contest win earns virtual author visit for Jefferson Middle School students". Midland Daily News. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  13. ^ Rought, Karen (November 9, 2015). "Rick Riordan signs 10,000 'Magnus Chase' books for Black Friday". Hypable. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  14. ^ "Meyer, Riordan back on best-seller list". USA TODAY. Retrieved 2015-10-15.
  15. ^ a b c d "Editions of The Sword of Summer". Goodreads Editions Lists. Goodreads. Retrieved July 18, 2016.
  16. ^ Reagan, Maggie (October 1, 2015). "Booklist Online". Booklist Online. Booklist. Retrieved October 9, 2015.
  17. ^ "Best Sellers - The New York Times". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2016-01-20.
  18. ^ "Best Sellers - The New York Times". www.nytimes.com. Retrieved 2016-02-13.
  19. ^ WLKY.com (Dec 09, 2015). "Amazon announces best-selling books of 2015". WLKY News. WLKY. Retrieved September 13, 2016. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  20. ^ "The Sword of Summer by Rick Riordan | SLJ Review". School Library Journal. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  21. ^ a b c Mitori, Jody (Oct 11, 2015). "Riordan turns to Norse gods for new Magnus Chase series". Book Reviews. St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  22. ^ Rosen, Judith (Dec 10, 2015). "Children's Holiday Sales 2015: Picture Books and Middle Grade Top YA". Children's Books: Industry News. Publishers Weekly. Retrieved September 13, 2016.
  23. ^ a b "THE SWORD OF SUMMER by Rick Riordan | Kirkus Reviews". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 2015-10-10.
  24. ^ Szabo, Kit (October 16, 2015). "Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard, Book 1: The Sword of Summer". Reviews. Kidsreads. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  25. ^ Khan, Yousuf (December 4, 2015). "Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard: The Sword of Summer". Time for Kids. Time Magazine. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  26. ^ a b Gopnik, Adam (November 6, 2015). "Rick Riordan's 'Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard'". Sunday Book Review. The New York Times. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  27. ^ "Magnus Chase and the Sword of Summer -- Rview". Children's Books Reviews. The Guardian. March 16, 2016. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  28. ^ a b "The Sword of Summer — "Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard" Series". Focus on the Family Magazine: Book Reviews. Plugged In. Retrieved August 25, 2016.
  29. ^ a b Bondi, Gabrielle (November 10, 2015). "Book Review: Magnus Chase and the Gods of Asgard: The Sword of Summer by Rick Riordan". Books. TheYoungFolks.com. Retrieved August 25, 2016.

Wikibreak[edit]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Atschool