Aunt Em is Medusa. In Greek mythology, Medusa was a Gorgon with the ability to turn anyone who looked directly at her into stone.
It is Auntie Em's garden emporium. It just looked funky in the movie and book because Percy has dislexia and they were showing it from his point of view.
"And oh, Aunt Em! I'm so glad to be at home again!"
She is called Auntie Em, short for Emily.
She was in the cellar of the house.
There is just one (1) room in Uncle Henry's and Aunt Em's farmhouse in the original 1900 book edition of "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, author and Oz series originator Lyman Frank Baum (May15, 1856 - May 6, 1919) describes the house as small. He explains that lumber is carried by wagon over a very great distance before reaching Uncle Henry's and Aunt Em's land in the midst of the treeless Kansas prairies. Consequently, just enough lumber is ordered to build a house with enough space for a kitchen in one corner and sleeping space for the three inhabitants.
Aunt Em is Percy Jackson's loving and caring maternal aunt in "The Lightning Thief." She takes care of Percy while his mother, Sally, is away working in the book.
Aunty Em's Gnome Emporium
Medusa in Percy Jackson, was in Aunt Em's shop. Medusa was olny mentioned in book one.
In the movie : no. In the book: yes
he cuts her head off because she is Medusa
At Auntie Em's Garden Emporium
It is Auntie Em's garden emporium. It just looked funky in the movie and book because Percy has dislexia and they were showing it from his point of view.
Aunt Em was created in 1900.
"And oh, Aunt Em! I'm so glad to be at home again!"
In the original 1900 book edition of 'The Wizard of Oz', the first two characters that the reader meets are Dorothy Galeand Uncle Henry. The two are mentioned in the first line of the book. In that same sentence, Aunt Em is mentioned third.In the beloved 1939 film version, the first two characters are Dorothy and Aunt Em. Dorothy interrupts Aunt Em in the middle of farmyard chores. That interaction quickly brings in Uncle Henry too.
Simply and rustically furnished is a description of how Uncle Henry's and Aunt Em's farmhouse is furnished in the original 1900 book edition of "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, the farmhouse has just one room. There is just enough space for areas to be set aside for preparing food, eating, and sleeping. In fact, the room includes a rusty cooking stove, a cupboard for dishes, a table, 3-4 chairs, and beds for Dorothy and for Uncle Henry and Aunt Em.
Aunt Em maybe short for Emily.