Artemis Fowl the second is described to have raven hair, pale skin, and deep blue eyes. He is also described to have a "vampire smile." The reason behind why he has pale skin is due to the countless hours he spent indoors, in front of the computer screen. Artemis always dresses quite well, in suits and such. In book five he ends up getting his index and middle fingers switched, in addition to having one hazel eye, and one blue eye. It is also said his eyes get darker when he lies.
There is also a graphic novel. There are artist depictions of all of the characters from the first book are represented. To see Artemis check the related link below.
In Artemis Fowl, Foaly wore a tinfoil hat because he thought that human intelligence agencies were monitoring his transport and surveillance network. He wore the hat to prevent them from reading his mind.
Another Answer:
Actually, Foaly wore a tinfoil hat to block mind-probing rays which he said had not been invented yet but better safe than sorry
For the first book, items that can represent it is:
The book (fairy bible)
Holly's helmet
Sunglasses
A jug of rice wine
Champagne
Gold Bars
An acorn
For the Second:
Soft Nose Lasers
An acorn
Batteries
A gold medallion
Third:
A c cube
A jade ring
A disk disguised as a gold medallion
An Iris Cam
Fourth:
The Fairy Thief (painting)
Small visual display (the thing that had Opal's face on it during the murder and troll assult)
A disk disguised as a gold medallion
A booty box filled with chocolate truffles
A fairy communicator
Fifth:
A ring (a fairy communicator in disguise)
A silver bracellete
A stone or wooden stick
A volcano
Eyes (one blue one hazel)
Stone gargoyles
Sixth:
Toy monkey
Diamonds
Seventh:
Probes
A gun or tazer (anything that made Artemis and Orion switch back and forth)
Edit/Add:
For the fifth book, I think Abbot's horns can be added, as well as a spark of magic and hands with switched fingers. Maybe even a Golf bag or mirror.
For the sixth, a tranquilizer dart.
Seventh, maybe a rune or a snowflake.
basically armani suits yet he wore teenage clothes once as a disguise to steal money from a bank................
I think it was one designed specially by someone but the font in the books is Perpetua 13.5.
he did so because his mother Angeline fowl was "distraught by her son's obsession and afraid of the effects of the past two years on his mind,signed up her thirteen-year-old for treatment with the school counselor." taken from artemis fowl:arctic incident first chapter,page 6 last line. i do not own this dialogue but this is used only to answer this question and Eoin Colfer owns the dialogue
A summary of Artemis fowl would be... ingenious criminal mastermind with the brains of a genious and the imagination of a child- a dangerous combination. He also has a soft side which comes out in some of the later books
It is a fairy swear world used in the Artemis Fowl series. D'Arvit translated from Gnomish into English is s*** No it isn't. That wasn't confirmed. Colfer said it means d*** it, and tried to make them sound alike so that the more mature readers could get the gyst of the seriousness he tried to fit in the story.
Artemis Fowl is a criminal mastermind, and dicovers the existence of fairies living underground. He tries to steal their ransom fund by kidnapping Captain Holly Short, but a whole bunch of things go wrong. I don't want to give the whole book away, so to find out more you'd better read the book yourself.
Artemis Fowl, Artemis Fowl senior, Angeline Fowl, Juliet Butler, Butler, Arno Blunt, Jon Spiro, Loafers McGuire, Mulch Diggums (Mo Digence), Spiro's secretary, Julius Root, Foaly, Holly Short, Carla Frazetti, a cryogenics doctor, some 80-year old woman (used-to-be nun) and a bunch of civilans
Medusa's head was used to turn a sea dragon to stone, but it was Perseus who used it, not Artemis
I think it was one designed specially by someone but the font in the books is Perpetua 13.5.
The name Artemis is used today as a name:for dog foodof a medical group (Artemis Health)of a comic or program character heroine (Young Justice)for the goddess of hunting, wild animals, wilderness, moon,etc.titling a book series (Artemis Fowl)in technology as a virusof an app (Artemis Director's ViewFinder)(There's more but I got bored) I'm the one who answers chistofer drew questions too.This might be familliar- :D
In "Lost Colony" on the journey back from Hybras Artemis "borrowed" some of Holly's magic when they were joined. I don't know if he can replenish the magic he stole through the ritual, or whether he used it all up in Time Paradox. But yes, at one point he had magic.
he did so because his mother Angeline fowl was "distraught by her son's obsession and afraid of the effects of the past two years on his mind,signed up her thirteen-year-old for treatment with the school counselor." taken from artemis fowl:arctic incident first chapter,page 6 last line. i do not own this dialogue but this is used only to answer this question and Eoin Colfer owns the dialogue
Apollo, in one account of the myth of Orion and Artemis, apparently used Artemis to kill Orion unknowing.
People name their children Diana, Artemis's Roman name. Addition: In 2003 an EU Military Operation in Democratic Republic of Congo was code-named Artemis. There is a classical record label Artemis. And there is the fantasy novel hero Artemis Fowl.
A summary of Artemis fowl would be... ingenious criminal mastermind with the brains of a genious and the imagination of a child- a dangerous combination. He also has a soft side which comes out in some of the later books
It is a fairy swear world used in the Artemis Fowl series. D'Arvit translated from Gnomish into English is s*** No it isn't. That wasn't confirmed. Colfer said it means d*** it, and tried to make them sound alike so that the more mature readers could get the gyst of the seriousness he tried to fit in the story.
Artemis Fowl is a criminal mastermind, and dicovers the existence of fairies living underground. He tries to steal their ransom fund by kidnapping Captain Holly Short, but a whole bunch of things go wrong. I don't want to give the whole book away, so to find out more you'd better read the book yourself.
There used to be a sun god, Helios, and a moon goddess, Selene. For some reason their duties were taken over by the twins, Apollo (sun) and Artemis (moon).