* One from the very first chapter of the first book: Nguyen, whose intel helps Artemis procure his copy of the Book, is presented as Butler's informant (he states that "Nguyen is a good man" who probably isn't scamming them). Then Butler fails to recognize Nguyen through a half-assed disguise. And Artemis has to introduce Butler and explain their relationship to him. So does Nguyen know Butler or not?
** He may know Nguyen's reputation but not the man himself.
* The Book was written thousands of years before the series takes place. It's where Artemis got all his information about the People, including details about the LEP and their procedures. First of all, have those regulations not changed at all since then? And secondly, the Book was described as small, like the size of a matchbox. How much information could possibly be in it? Artemis has gotten a lot from it, but it's hard to imagine that it contained that much information on, well, what appears to be ''everything''.
** As for the first part, it's mentioned in the first book that the word "leprechaun" is a corruption of "LEP Recon," so they've clearly been around for a while. Plus, while the book is thousands of years old, that's not to say that revised editions don't come out every now and then when a law gets changed. Hell, they could probably use some kind of sympathetic magic to alter every copy of the book to reflect new or revised laws. And regarding the second part, I've heard of guys who can write on a grain of rice. That skill would certainly increase the amount of information you can cram onto a page.
** True, but the sprite that gave it to him had been exiled for a considerable amount of time, so she wouldn't have access to any revised editions. If they were somehow altered through magic, would that magic affect the copies of the Book possessed by fairies not in contact with the People?
** Most likely; if a new major fairy law came out, one that affected every fairy in existence, one would assume that even exiled fairies would need to hear of it or risk outing the entire race.
** That explains the laws part of it, but isn't it some kind of security risk to have all LEP procedures and regulations in a book that's owned by ''every fairy''? The LEP is more than just the fairy police force. They deal with everything from traffic violations to international affairs. It would be like a government publishing its specific plans for what it would do if a war broke out between it and some other country, then making sure every citizen had a copy of said plans. That could go wrong in so many ways.
*** How would it go wrong. The fairy population is small enough that they only have two major cities (Atlantis and Haven) and the Book automatically burns if it is stolen from a fairy.

* Artemis's supposed to be an awesome genius but in the [[spoiler: fourth book]] when he's in trouble and has some kind of digital handcuffs he asked to Holly how many digits the password has. She said that three and then stated that there were thousands of possibilities... Artemis replies that there are millions. Now if you have 3 digits in which each can have 10 different possibilities (0 to 9) then you have 10^3 = 1000 possibilites.
** Even if you take the view that single/double digit codes are valid (highly unlikely) you would still only have 1110 possibilities. On the other hand, my copy doesn't have Artemis saying this at all. He never states the number of possibilities (Holly says "there are so many"), but he does say that the settings have likely not been changed from factory ones (37% probability, according to him).
** Do not forget the fact he had been mind wiped and the numbers were in Gnommish and he had no way of knowing how many numbers were required compare it to You having handcuffs like these and the numbers being in a language you had never heard of and did not know how to read it and not knowing how many numbers were in the code.
*** Umm, no. He asks Holly, and she says that the code is three digits long. And the script the numbers were written in doesn't affect how many buttons there are, just means he couldn't see which is which. If you had a Cyrillic keyboard in front of you, you could tell that there are 36 characters even if you can't read all of them.
*** In the audio book I have, both things are said. Possibly your copy of the book is a later print that removed the "millions of possibilities" line when Colfer realized it was inaccurate.
*** Chalk it up to Fridge Brilliance in a way. Think about it: Far more than mathematics, Artemis' primary skills lie in psychological manipulation. What he needed was for Holly to figure out the combination without just guessing and so he made her think that she needed to figure it out with logic rather than go through all possibilities by exaggerating the number of possibilities there. By dropping it so casually he avoided her noticing, and she was able to figure out the combination as a result. Genius, that is Artemis.
*** Actually, there is another reason: Remember, Artemis doesn't know Gnommish at that point. It's an outside context language for him. He would have no idea of how many digits the fairy system had. For all he knew, Gnommish was base-100, which would change a lot. Even human languages have had bases other than 10, the maya had a base-20, and in (really)Old English shepard's jargon, you used base twenty. Computer language is base-two, and the fairies might have had a totally original system, such as maybe having all multiples 10 be their own digits. He didn't know that Gnommish was base ten, and so his words reflected his ignorance.
*** Plus, even genii freeze up and forget simple things when panicking.
* Despite all the technological advancements of the fairies, they seem far behind humans in the area of social sciences. For example, they are far more sexist than the modern West. Also, has anyone noticed that they effectively live under a dictatorship? Their supreme governing body is the Council. It is said that the Council appoints its own members, with no mention made of any sort of elections or term limits. Or, for that matter, terms at all. Why haven't the fairies noticed that many human countries have democracy and they don't? The lack of it has been the cause of many revolutions in world history. Why haven't the fairies rebelled or at least protested?
** There's a reference to them holding a referendum (on the issue of removing one of the more inconvenient hexes Frond put on all The People way back when) in The Time Paradox. The sexism I think is AuthorTract; several of the female fairies are clearly wronged by sexist attitudes: Opal wouldn't be nearly so bad if her father hadn't expected her to get an MRS degree instead of doing what she loved, Holly is told outright she has to be ''better'' than the guys to keep her job, while Lili Frond gets special treatment but isn't taken seriously.
*** As I recall it, she didn't have to be better because Root hates women (he didn't), she had to be better because she was the highest ranking female employed by the LEP (and really the only one anybody took seriously) and any slipup she made would be attributed to her sex, giving the sexists justification in not hiring women. A bad justification, but still one they would jump at the chance to have.
*** She wasn't and isn't the highest ranking female in the LEP, though. Wing Commander Vinyaya has outranked her the whole time, taught Holly in the academy, and is old enough to be grey-haired. Though, no, Root wasn't telling her to be better out of outright personal misogyny, but out of an understanding of institutional misogyny. Not that he was doing much that we see to counter it, and so far as I can see in the later few books, when she's under Vinyaya's and Kelp's commands, things don't seem so bad on the institutionalised sexism front, even though in the latter case she's in Recon and under a bloke's command, so the difference could only be the individual male commander.
*** It's probably a confusion in terms. LEP is simply the Lower Elements Police, responsible for everything from traffic tickets to murder. LEP Recon are the Big Boys (and Girl) who handle threats to The People, among them most anything to do with Artemis Fowl. Vinyaya was presumably a member of some other branch of the LEP, and thus, Holly is the highest ranking female officer in her particular branch.
*** And Vinyaya was in LEP Retrieval, right?
*** Holly is explicitly stated to be the first and so far only female officer to successfully enter the [=LEPRecon=] unit; Root claims he pushes her harder than the male officers so she can prove females can do the job (she gets called a "test case" several times in the first book).
** Fairies live a long time. There was a reference to one dwarf who was over ''two thousand'' years old. Their society probably changes a lot more slowly, because a lot of people would still be around from the days where sexism and dictatorships were the norm. They are starting to change, but it just doesn't happen as fast as it does with humans.
* Where are everyone's grandparents? Fairies live for ''hundreds of years'' and Holly is stated in the first book to be somewhere in her eighties ("She had lost her father when she was barely sixty, almost twenty years ago now"). So not only should her grandparents be alive, but her great-grandparents, her great-great-grandparents, and possibly her great-great-great-grandparents. Artemis is a teenager. Where are his grandparents?
** He lives in a WorldOfNoGrandparents.
*** It's mentioned in the first book that Artemis' paternal grandfather died when Artemis was very young. Possibly this happened with his other three grandparents, as well. For all we know, Artemis' mother was an orphan.
** Since the Fowls have been high-class criminals for generations, I don't it unbelievable they were bumped off at some point, but Holly's do look like a pretty big absence. However, she is stated to be Cupid's great-granddaughter, which implies a much longer generation time than you'd base off Holly's own age and might help explain it.
** It is directly stated in the first book that Fairies can only have children once every twenty years. Compare that to humans and the amount of time its likely to take them to have children, plus the fact that their is limited living space for their population to inhabit, and its possible that most Fairies wait several centuries before choosing to have children. Either that, or Holly is just unlucky enough that her grandparents also had lives which were cut short.
*** Also, don't forget that it's mentioned in ''The Time Paradox'' that the fairies just recently survived a major plague. The elderly and the very young are those most susceptible to disease, so it wouldn't be surprising that most fairies grandparents died in the plague.
* In ''The Opal Deception'', why would humans need Opal's weapons to win a war against fairies? In the first book Holly says "number would subdue even magic". Its true, too. Haven City is stated to have around 10,000 inhabitants, and Atlantis has a similar amount. That means for every 1 fairy, there are about 325,000 humans. And fairies can't go into human buildings unless invited. And they can't operate in sunlight. And their magic depends solely on a ritual that could be prevented by simply cutting down ancient oaks by river fronts. They seem to have no more than a few hundred LEP officers. They could never hope to even take the worlds' surface, much less hold it. Even with the loss of internet, the human war machine would easily overwhelm them. Face it, if humans ever fought fairies, fairies would be royally screwed.
** Except that the technology of the Fairies is vastly superior to that of humans. Most notable are the nuclear weapons they possess which can have their blast radius calibrated as needed, and which destroy only organic life, while leaving infrastructure completely intact. The technology of the bomb could probably be refined to be lethal only to humans. Plus, its not that they can't go out during the day, its merely that the daylight dilutes their magic, which would increase the risk of their being discovered. This would not be a concern if the {{Masquerade}} was breached. Also, humans would not necessarily know about the specific needs of the Ritual, and even then would probably be unable to access ''all'' necessary oak trees (particularly if the Fairies started actively defending them). Finish with the fact that Fairies can be ''very'' liberal with what they interpret as an invitation, not to mention the fact that it is shown that they can simply destroy a dwelling to get at anyone inside it, and that in the latest book the enchantment enforcing that rule was broken, and suddenly a war between humans and Fairies seems to ''vastly'' favour the latter.
*** Humans occupy almost every corner of world, to wipe us out they would have to biobomb half the land, even if they didn't care about the planet, this would presumably severely sap their magic powers. If they could refine the biobomb (how do you refine radiation anyway?) they would have used it in the first book. They can't conquer us permantly ala Goa'uld, since we'll eventually reverse engineer the tech, overcome the magic, and then the population difference will come into play, too much of a 'shadow goverment' will vastly increase risks of detection. Possibly, some kind of bioplague would work, but civilisation would crumble, and we could start chucking around the nukes.
*** Plus the fairies are {{Actual Pacifist}}s. while their technology and magic might more than a match for todays armies the People simply don't have the stomach for outright war. Butler notes this in the 3rd book.
*** Backing up the last point, they lost a war 10 000 years ago. Possibly from being cowards (Abbot mentioned it in book 5, but that was possibly an exaggeration) and from the demon warlocks, who could interfere with time, being pacifists. (It was mentioned in book 5 that by the time Qwan got over his pacifist nature, they would all have been eaten by demons). The fairies got even more scared from being beaten despite vastly superior tech and chickened out. They demon warlocks disappeared not long after the war (having chickened out temporaily and lifted their island out of time) and can't overcome their nature to help. By the time they came back, we've developed nukes and could chuck them around, so they may be afraid of a [[RockFallsEveryoneDies Earth blows up everyone dies]] situation. \\
*** On another point, Artemis does acknowledge that if it wasn't for the fact that fairies aren't willing to go to war for real estate (because of their magic? it changed Artemis Senior), we'd be dead and gone.
** When have we ever actually seen the potential combat application of fairy magic? Fairy magic is implied to be far more powerful than shown in the books, and presumably has a bad case of [[HoldingBackThePhlebotinum holding back the Phlebotinium]] with magic. If the GodzillaThreshold was passed on a fairy-society-wide scale, they could throw down some serious firepower. In the first book, the Sprite Artemis interrogates threatens to "kill him in a snap of her fingers". This is clear hypoerbole on her part, but still relevant as it shows magic can be used offensively. In most of the scenarios involving fairy magic being accessible to the protagonists, the said fairy is [[DramaPreservingHandicap low on power]], and more often than not blows it in a big healing. The [[AGodAmI empowered Opal Koboi]] can use magical stunning bolts sufficient to cut through a horde of animals. The demon warlocks induce a volcano and channel its power, as well as channeling the power of a presumably very high-yield bomb. No1 can summon an illusion of a dozen human soldiers. Summoning energy bolts is a frequently mentioned magical power. Not to mention the potential HeartIsAnAwesomePower uses for their shown magic powers and technologies. Mass mesmerization using broadcasting technologies, anyone (not everybody has the HeroicWillpower to stand up to the Mesmer)? Or creative uses of time travel?
*** When have it been implied that fairy magic is more powerful? The Sprite in first book was probably just lying as a last resort to scare him. Opal Koboi was only been able to get her super-charge magic was only because she was taking the fairy-equivalent of magic steriods. And when is it mention that energy bolts is a magical power, as its not use by the LEP or anyone at all. Also there is only ONE island of demons. humans have spread across the ENTIRE GLOBE. Time-Travel is shown as incredibly dangerous, and not always successful, and Mass Mesmerization wont work because you not everyone will be looking at a screen, and given on how a mesmerized person is portrayed in the book, can be easily recognized.
*** Colfer's explanation of the different kinds of fairy magic is inconsistent at best. An example of this would be how many times fairies have to do the Ritual. Holly lasted four years before the first book, which was supposed to be much longer than she should have put it off, but she also managed. After that, she's needed to do it just about every book because she's been completely out. Another would be exactly what magic fairies have - Holly's minor in college was magic, but she isn't a healer, and time travel is pretty much just the wheelhouse of the demon warlocks. So what does hers involve? To the original point, even if that sprite was lying, which is a fair point, Holly made a similar claim when she first met Artemis, and Holly doesn't lie much.
* In ''The Opal Deception'' how did ''any'' of the fairies buy the story that a stun weapon that had been given to Holly ''mere minutes before'' could ''blow up Commander Root''?
** [[HanlonsRazor They're idiots.]]
** Neutrino blasters aren't just stun weapons. They have a stun setting, but can go right up to "slice through metal". And Root's wearing a prototype shimmer-suit, which is of course nuclear-powered.
*** My understanding of the situation was that the Internal Affairs officer Ark Sool already had it in for Holly, and was interpreting the situation in the light he wanted to see it in. He casually brushed aside Foaly's objections to his theory by ignoring the parts that made no sense. It was said earlier that he considered all of the LEP to be hot-headed loose cannons. He was so thrilled to be rid of the two he considered to be the most dangerous that he was willing to invent any wild theory.
* What gives the Fairies the right to mind-wipe any humans that find out about them? They have no jurisdiction over humans.
** Who says they care? To them, priority #1 is keeping fairy society hidden. Since no human government knows it's happening (which is sort of the point), it's not like anyone is going to argue with the fairies about it.
** Objectively speaking, [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans they don't, but they can get away with it and they believe it's necessary due to their distorted perception of us as a species, so they do it anyways.]]
*** CantArgueWithElves!
* At the end of ''The Eternity Code'', the fairies are picking through Artemis' memories and those of his human friends in order to find and remove all those related to the fairy world. Wouldn't they therefore have discovered his [[Main/MemoryGambit Memory Gambit]]?
** Ah, Main/FridgeLogic. That bothered me too. The best I could come up with was that Foaly knew Artemis had been in the presence of fairies on that particular day, so he just wiped the whole day without looking at it.
** It seems like I remember Foaly talking about how he should triple-check to make sure nothing else was there before Root shut him up.
** I thought it was more like "I'll take a look at this as my own personal hobby, when I don't have anything else on the back burner." Since Foaly averages about one new [[AppliedPhlebotinum gadget]] per book (I haven't read ''The Time Paradox''), its possible he didn't get around to it or forgot about it.
** It was automatic, probably, because I can't see Foaly sieving through three years of memories and deleting every memory of Artemis thinking about fairies.
** It was mostly automatic process, which was supposed to remove all fairy (including the said MemoryGambit) related memories. Foaly does actually suspect that Fowl might have something up his sleeves and does say they should triple-check everything. Manually. Root shuts him down and tells him to just get over it. So yeah, if they had checked themselves the memories, they would have seen it. As it happened, they didn't and it slipped through the cracks. To explain it otherwise, imagine you want to remove all .txt files from a folder. One of those text files details how your friend plans to restore the data and where he hid them. However, rather than manually check each and every text file(memory), you just press "Delete all .txt files". That file will slip through and you don't find out about his plan.
** Keep in mind that by this point they thought they had found every one of Artemis' contingencies, and had (as far as they knew) confirmed it with the mesmer. Foaly being paranoid is just Foaly, as far as the other faries were concerned all loose ends had been tied up.
* Speaking of Artemis' contingencies...wouldn't everything be revealed as soon as he took the mirrored lenses to Butler's contact? In his last diary entry in the book, Artemis mentions wanting to pay a visit to Butler's contact to find out who made the, well, contacts he finds in his eyes--wouldn't the man who made the lenses be confused when the one who commissioned him to do it apparently doesn't remember doing the deed?
** Artemis would find out from the guy (let's call him Joe) that he'd hired Joe to make the lenses, but presumably Artemis or Butler, whoever hired him, never told Joe anything, so all Joe can say is, "You paid me to make you some mirrored contact lenses and no, you didn't say why."

* How did Artemis not know Butler's first name before the events of The Eternity Code? Does Butler not get payslips?
** Most likely, the payroll for all employees of the Fowls is handled by a computer system - if there's someone overseeing it, it's probably an accountant or bookkeeper of some sort, not the family's eldest son. This doesn't mean that Artemis couldn't find the information if he wanted to, but then, Butler is one of a very few people who Artemis genuinely respects. If Butler asked Artemis not to look it up, I think Artemis would probably honor the request. At least as long as there was no way he could profit monetarily from knowing Butler's first name, that is.
** Maybe the Fowls pay Butler's fees to the agency, who pass it on to him.
** That and they could just pay him straight up cash. They're aren't exactly a lawful bunch, those Fowls. Plus Butler has a dozen fake identities.
* Why did Opal go through an elaborate scheme involving time travel to get the lemur? Without the time travel, young Artemis would have sold the Lemur to the extinctionists who would have given it to Opal anyway.
** ...I had a whole explanation ready to write out here and just realised that it involves Opal starting her own Stable Time Loop by going into the 'future' and becoming Artemis' mother to get the lemur that would be hers by making Artemis go back in time which he wouldn't have done if she hadn't done that in the first place. You're right, it makes no sense!
** Bear in mind that there is no 'original' timeline to work from here - Artemis's memories of the event are fictions created by his own mind after No. 1 mindwipes him. Presumably, something would have gone wrong - I'm betting on Butler arranging for the lemur's escape after Artemis makes the exchange.
** From Opal's perspective the Extinctionists had ''already'' messed up, and the lemur was out of her hands. She knows that Artemis will go back in time and get the lemur - that's already happened, it can't unhappen - so she makes sure that when he gets the lemur he gives it to her.
*** ...or she didn't realize that her going into the future was what screwed up the "get the lemur from the Extinctionists" plan. She isn't exactly a picture of mental health.
*** She may not want to change her own time line so she went with it and planned for it to end with her getting the lemur anyway.
** Opal didn't start the time-traveling thing. From her perspective, she had already lost the lemur. She went forward in time in order to get the situation under her control again. I'd explain better, but [[TimeyWimeyBall time is confusing as hell.]]
** Simple. Future!Artemis already was changing into a more traditional Hero. Eventually, he would have tried to {{Set Right What Once Went Wrong}} and save the lemur he'd killed, and then encountered Miss Koboi. Opal follows him into the future, but stops a little while earlier, realizes she failed, so she "infects" Mrs. Fowl to try and change the past, resulting in a {{Stable Time Loop}}.
** Opal was already going to get the lemur but then Future!Artemis came and messed everything up. So she went into the future two days before the beginning of the story to impersonate Angeline, so that two days later when Artemis comes back with the lemur, she can steal it back. Of course, by impersonating Angeline, she sets off the whole story. So, she is the cause of her own failure.
* Am I the only person who sees a gigantic plot hole in the fact that Opal from before Artemis got involved with the fairies was taken out of her timeline and ''left in the 'future'?'' Unless they catch her and send her back to the exact point she left (and with a mindwipe, at that) in the next book, the ''entire plot'' of at least the Opal Deception is royally fucked over.
** Becomes a ChekhovsGun.
* Why didn't Artemis consider going after a silky sifaka that wasn't the last one? If they'd traveled back in time before Opal started harvesting lemur brain fluid, for example, they could have picked one up without going against Artemis the younger. They could even have got a breeding pair.
** I imagine that Artemis saw an opportunity to save two birds with one stone. He was looking to save his mother, yes, that was the most important thing. But Artemis was instrumental in ''the extinction of a species.'' In the time between the lemur incident and the present, he has progressively become a better person. And now he's standing on the edge of the abyss, lying to one of his only friends (and, not to make too big a point of it, a woman he has very conflicting feelings towards) and he has a chance to stop himself from allying with the most evil bastards humanity has to offer. He takes it.
** It was mentioned that they could only go to times and places they experienced. While Holly could do time, possibly neither of them have been to Madagascar in person, so Artemis just decided to take the easy option because he needs to save his mother, dammit.
** But it was ''the last'' silky safaka anyway, not the last male or the last female. If Artemis hadn't sold it to the Extinctionists, it would have died naturally before Angeline needed rescuing anyway. If he had gone back and gotten a breeding pair he could revive the safaka population, which was driven to extinction by hunters, etc. He wasn't an instrumental part at all in my opinion.
*** That always bugged me too, but chalk it up to the whole "no sex in a kid's book" thing. Though there was that highly awkward bit in the fifth book about hormones, but still, not ''breeding''.
*** Except that cloning a female from him ''was'' mentioned. Not ''exactly'' what they need one for, but a need of a female was mentioned.
* Why didn't Opal keep samples of silky sifaka DNA, if the lemurs were so important to her plans?
** Wasn't she forced to give it away so it could be used to cure a plague that was killing the People?
*** She was forced to give away the brain fluid extract. She was just too much of an idiot/lunatic to keep extra samples of "useless" flesh or other sources of genetic material.
** Because the ban on cloning was a lot more strictly policed then or she didn't know she could enhance her magic that way until her donors died. It was only later that she realised that she could do it, maybe even from her research. She never said she knew at the time and her laments about her dead donors could be that she would have kept them alive for more Spelltropy cures and still had them when she realised.
* Speaking of the silky sikafa...Does anyone else find it a little ridiculous that everyone, including Artemis, considers sending the lemur to its death to be a despicable and unforgiveable action? He's wracked with guilt, and everyone is gasping and backing away--because he sacrificed a lemur in order to potentially save his father's life. It just doesn't seem to make sense that of all the criminal activities Artemis has ever engaged in--which include kidnapping!--he would latch on to this one, performed out of love for his father, as the most horrible thing he has ever done. Also, since when was his mother an environmental activist?
** He was ashamed of this one in part because a) he was responsible for ending an entire species, and b) he did it out of *spite*. Remember, he hated the lemur because his mother had just spent some ridiculous sum on it, which he felt should be used in the search for his father, so he transferred some of his frustration/hatred to the lemur. He may have felt, among other things, that this was an uncharacteristic loss of control. Also, perhaps he regrets associating with the extinctionists because they are the other side of criminality - where Artemis is cold, calculating, and profit-making, the extinctionists are just bigots with too much money to spend. Perhaps Artemis disliked that experience because it reminded him what kind of person he had to become similar to.
** It's pointed out several times that faeries are very environmentally conscious and love animals (most of them are vegetarians), so they'd of course look down on Artemis killing the lemur, especially as the lemur was the last of its species.
*** Vegetarians? [[WhatMeasureIsANonCute Vole curry]], anyone?
*** [[SyntacticAmbiguity Made by or originally for, not of, perhaps?]]
*** Mulch is guilt-ridden over killing a rabbit and apologized to a spider he squishes in the first book, but this apparent sympathy with animals seems to have disappeared by The Arctic Incident ("he began to take trophies...a cat if he was peckish.").
*** The vegetarian inconsistencies start within the first book. Mulch apologises to the spider, but likes that the soil around the manor has plenty of insect life, even though spiders are no 'higher' a form of life than insects-in-general, and some of those 'insects' may have been spiders. We're also told that insects are a nutritional ''requirement'' for dwarves.
*** Could just be that the apology to the spider was Mulch chiding himself for being too jumpy.
** Might be that faeries view eating meat as a necessity, given biological requirements, and do their best to limit the killing of animals to what's necessary for food. Mulch apologized to the spider because he killed it by accident, and felt guilty about killing the rabbit because rather than using it for food or something else necessary, he's just doing it to get away from his captors.
*** As mentioned in the Artic Incident. But in the Atlantis Complex, Holly is calls Mulch disgusting when he suggests real meat. Maybe it ranges from culture to culture, species to species. Pixies may eat endangered animals and dwarves may eat insects, but elves need less protein and their culture is strictly vegetarian.
* How do fairies see while vibrating too fast for eyes to follow them?
** Magic.
** Speaking of which, how does vibrating really fast make them invisible? Light waves would still bounce off of them, they'd just look sort of blurry. Also, they'd get so hot it would probably kill them.
*** ''Magic''. According to one book, they're quite often misidentified as heat haze, so the author does acknowledge at least once they'd be slightly visible. I think the only reason the 'vibrating' explanation is given for invisibility is so in the first book Artemis can discover a way to see them with Human technology.
*** The HandWave basically relies on Persistence of Vision, or possibly a WeirdnessCensor.
* Why are the fairies such huge colossal tremendous pricks? Their whole position pretty much boils down to "Humans are ugly and slimy and can't do magic and destroy the environment and are racist and gross!", and nobody decides to pose as a wealthy eccentric who happens to have developed extremely green technologies? There's FantasticRacism, and then there's a PlanetOfIdiotBalls.
** Considering humans drove fairies off the face of the Earth and proceeded to destroy the planet and blow the shit out of each other, for almost no reason whatsoever, I'd say the vast majority of the bias isn't far off the mark. We're xenophobic, greedy, killing machines--at least a good portion of us are--and considering we forced their entire race of people into underground living I'd say the People have the right to be pissed. As for the "wealthy eccentric who happens to have developed extremely green technologies"...well, if someone three feet tall suddenly appeared in human society and proceeded to build things that shouldn't logically exist for fifty years, you don't think maybe people would get a bit suspicious?
*** Hell, yeah, we're greedy, xenophobic and violent, but from what we actually ''see'' of The People's behavior, as opposed to being told, they really aren't all that much better, there are just fewer of them (and we're told outright that this isn't intentional, they just have a much longer breeding cycle), and they primarily draw their 'us vs. them' line around The People rather than a nation or ethnic group, so their xenophobia is aimed near-solely at us. They're also ''more'' sexist than most of The West.
*** I also think that a lot of the fairies' perceptions of humans are attributed to gross generalizations. Since it's been hundreds of years since fairies were driven underground, technically it was only our ancestors who deserved that anger. Of course, there's still the fact that we'd wage war on them if we found out about it (though YMMV on that account) and that we're destroying the earth, but once again, gross generalizations, and, as the above troper said, it's not like they're doing much to counteract it, as far as we know.
*** If fairies are supposedly so much better than humans at everything, how the hell could humans drive them underground to begin with, anyway?
*** Because there are a lot more of us. Haven and Atlantis, their largest cities, only have tens of thousands of inhabitants, and one gets the impression that Haven and Atlantis are all there is to The People's civilization these days. (on the other hand, plenty of people seem to think Australia consists of Sydney, Melbourne, and scenery, so just because we get that impression doesn't mean there ''aren't'' towns and villages, though underground it would be harder than here.)
** Maybe that's the point. They sit around on their high horse (well, subterranean horse) and condemn humans for doing whatever, but basically the only moral advantage they have on us is that they pollute less. Which is probably easy enough to do when finite resources have been a concern for millennia instead of decades. But a lot of them are dicks, there seems to be just as much crime and theft underground as there is above-ground, and fairy society has as many hang-ups and foibles as does human society. It's not that they're all dicks, it's that they're all people.
*** They have hypnotism, memory alteration, a tech wizard, and incredibly detailed info on the human world. There is no ''reason'' for them not to simply pick the right guy, and hypnotism him into discovering the right technologies, and then manipulate the news / stock market for those technologies to be picked upon. Hell, they should have done this from the very start, instead of sitting around and bitching, especially if they care about nature so much.
*** The reason is obvious: They don't trust humans to use their technology for good. As soon as they give up any of their technology, they can't control what happens with it anymore. They might give the humans the secret to free energy, only for the humans to say "We could make the biggest bomb ever!" Just look at all the grief they went through when Artemis discovered them and their tech.
** Dwarves are stated as natural kleptomaniacs, goblins are stupid and predisposed to crime and violence, demons make slaughterhouses look like PETA headquarters and I can't remember reading about a single half-competent gnome in the whole eight books. It seems to me like a case of CantArgueWithElves. Even more, Artemis is in later books considered by Holly a friend and an essentially good person, yet we, the ''human'' audience, still consider him morally ambiguous, let that sink in for a minute. Humans ins general still consider thing like peace, harmony and caring for the environment as positive thing that we should seek, yes there are human groups that like war (like demons do) or crime (like goblins), humans do have less than ideal government that make questionable choices (like the Council) and figures of authority that are pretty amoral (like Ark Sool) and go straight to violence and firepower to solve any problem, even enlisting others and making them violent too (Like Cudgeon and Abbot), let's not forget the odd CorruptCorporateExecutive willing to go to any lengths to achieve their goals(Like Opal). Humans do have a lot more criminals and bad people than fairies (mainly because we outnumber them roughly 35000:1) and we do pollute more than them. Then again I don't remember ever seeing Holly take quick showers or separating garbage (although that would be pretty boring). the People are less polluting not because they make a daily conscious effort to protect the Earth, but on account of having supertechnology that is not only cleaner, it is also cheaper, more efficient and more accessible than polluting technology, do they think humans would keep polluting the air with oil based engines if they could get their hands in some of those microscopic nuclear super lasting batteries? It seems to me that fairies simply gathered in the old days because of their small numbers and declared an "Us vs Them" on humans, then simply projected an AlwaysChaoticEvil image on us.
*** I think this is going a bit far. Demons are implied to still be the same as 10000 years ago we all of the fairies were more violent. Since Abbot to me it was implied time past at a different rate in limbo. Either that or demons were really waiting 100000 years to return and start a war. Gnomes and dwarves we do not know enough about. Goblins as a race are too stupid to be more evolved. The rest seem to be more of the occasional rogue or crazies so trying to use Opal as an example does not work. The choices the Council made were for the survival of the people and were far less questionable. It was mentioned at one point that the fairies technology automatically sorts their trash for them. The fairies are only more willing to use violence because their have stun weapons. In the end, they will use lethal force because they have absolutely no reason to trust humans. Pixies, sprites, centaurs and elves, being perhaps the more developed intellectually or emotional of the races are more against violence.
*** I believe what everyone is forgetting about this is that it seems to mostly be a one-sided Chinese Whispers or Red Menace, most of the problem lies in simple everyday propaganda spread from each person to each new generation. with the fact that none of the fairy race actually deals with the humans much your looking at no actual proof given to them that we aren't more than what we were painted to be. with the blatant laws regarding any form of interaction with us how could they possibly believe anything different when all their lives they have eithr had proof of how terrible we are in front of them or just been told so with no way to prove or disprove that notion. if one cant come up with evidence to the contrary odds are they will take what was told at face value. Questioning what we are told isn't inherently the nature of each species, people only question once they see an issue with a belief. Until then they hold onto the point they were given with an almost religious zeal.
* Don't know if this qualifies, but Holly and No 1 enter Taipei 101 with absolutely no repercussions as far as magic-loss is concerned.
** There's a sign that says 'welcome' or something. (I don't know if the real thing does, but it's mentioned in the book. Which has interesting implications for folk who have doormats.)
*** If there is, it's not near the main entrance. But since Taipei 101 is a building for public use, who holds the privilege of inviting fairies in? The government? Anyone (meaning Artemis himself could just invite them in)?
*** I just re-read the scene, and the book claims it's a small plaque over the main entrance. As for who has authority to give a fairy permission to enter a public building, I don't rightly know. I know in TEC Juliet asked security guards in the various buildings they infiltrated if she could bring her 'invisible friend' into the building to get Holly permission, but they had some actual authority over who entered.
** Thinking about it, I'm not even sure if they would need an invitation anyway. Doesn't the spell only forbid them from entering actual dwellings, where people dwell?
** It's all houses, if I remember correct. And they were worried about Taipei 101. But when they tried to enter, with reading "welcome" sign and didn't get any effect, they concluded it was effective. Also, it's not "who has authority". In book 1, Juliet works for Artemis but she can order Holly and Holly must obey(of course [[LoopholeAbuse she finds]] [[LiteralGenie a way]]). So it's not "who has authority". "Welcome" sign is universal and most likely placed by someone with actual authority so it has same effect has person granting entrance.
** To be precise, the sign says that visitors may come and go as they please, which is more or less an explicit invitation.
* In ''The Lost Colony,'' I have trouble with the monkeying around with the timeline near the end. Specifically, when [[spoiler:Holly dies]]. If Artemis truly shot a bullet/something into the past, ''shouldn't we have already seen it?'' And therefore, ''Holly should have never [[spoiler:died]]!'' If not, it's not consistent with ''The Time Paradox,'' in which actions in the translated past affect actions in the present.
** TLC's 'time travel' was a result of the unstable flow of time in Limbo, which was outside real time, while the time travel in TTP was between two points in real space-time. They sound different enough to be subject to different conditions to me.
*** Just put it down to a TimeyWimeyBall.
** If I remember correctly, it was explicitly mentioned that as Limbo was collapsing, time was not just showing past events, present events and future events at the same time, but also possible outcomes that could, but ultimately did never happen. Although Holly's death was initially present/future, due to Paradoxes being possible in this collapsing world, Artemis was able to alter the definite into only a possible outcome.
* In fairy society, [[HellBentForLeather leather]], such as in seating, is fine and dandy, but [[FurAndLoathing fur is evil and immoral]]? Am I missing something here?
** Fur is viscerally and obviously from an animal, and given the dialogue when Holly and Artemis notice the fur-covered seats in Opal's shuttle in the fourth book, I'd say Colfer just plain forgot. Especially since there is also far more fuss about fur than leather in the real world.
** Moreover, leather usually comes from the skin of animals that people eat anyway. Fur usually comes from the skin of animals that are hunted exclusively for their fur.
*** That only works for ''humans'' being fine with leather: Fairies are primarily vegetarian, and what animals they ''are'' mentioned as eating are very small, so they aren't generating big bits of leather as a waste product of their diet. Yet, multiple fairy shuttles we see have leather seating, and Mulch wears leather trousers without comment.
*** We really only ever see Haven, which is underground. The food and other organic products they mention--vole curry, fungus cigars--are appropriate to an underground environment. Atlantis, which is presumably underwater, may eat more fish and other sea critters, which would logically be larger and provide more skin for making into leather. They export it to Haven and other fairy villages.
** Or it could just be, y'know, synthetic leather. Which is not exactly rare.
* The biobomb kills anything living. This is perfectly acceptable to the fairies. In Fowl Manor, for example, there were insects, spiders, rats, mice, birds, probably some bats and small reptiles that had to be running around. It was an old place, this kind of thing happens. But the fairies killed what were probably ''hundreds'' of different organisms in a (failed!) attempt to keep their secret. Humans may be bastards, but fairies are ''dicks.''
** Holly's loss was also acceptable to everybody except her direct superior, and she's one of them. TheMasquerade is more important to them than any individual life.
*** I'm more willing to take Holly dying as an acceptable moral compromise. She's an LEP officer, she understands the risks and requirements of protecting the People. She wasn't on duty at the time, but it's still part of her job to put her life on the line, and she seems to accept that. But it's hypocritical to claim that everything humans do is evil while they're killing hundreds (if not thousands, if insects count) of critters. And while you could just say, "Well, yes, elves are hypocrites, it's been pointed out elsewhere on this very page, and probably by you," the fact that no one calls them on it is just a bit questionable.
*** [[SarcasmMode 'cause killing a house full of vermin is the same as being responsible for greatest mass extinction since late Cretaceous.]]
*** There is a paragraph in the book where at least Holly doesn't really like the idea of killing everything, but it has to be done to protect the People. And it ''is'' their last resort; by that point everyone was convinced that there was no other way to stop Artemis.
** What bugs me is that it says the bio-bomb kills anything living, but it really only affects animals. The plants survive. If it works the way they say it does, then at the end of book 1 Fowl Manor should have been a bare patch of ground with a few buildings on it.
*** actually in book 1, it said that the flowers inside the Manor wilted. Also since the fairies can control their bio-bomb blast radius, so perfectly that they concluded only the building.
* The fairies claim that radiation is more harmful to them than it is to us because they never had a chance to build up a tolerance to it. We've had nuclear bombs and power plants for between two and four generations. We've (knowingly) had radioactive material for something like a century. How the fuck can we have "built up a tolerance" to it? Moreover, they've had nuclear power for centuries, and there are still fairies alive--most adults, one would assume, since the eighty-year-old Holly is considered to be fairly young--that were born well before nuclear power was a ''thing'' on the surface. So is it just sitting around breathing the background radiation that turns us into supermen?
** That's what I figured. They shield their neutrino blasters, but we just let the sun irradiate us and our homes like a big, safe, electric space heater.
** I figured that they'd be getting a lot less cosmic radiation and also a lot less radiation from the sun. This would also explain why they are weaker in sunlight, seeing as they live underground and are basically shield from anything outside of nutrinos which come from space.
** The amount of radiation a human being receives from things like cell phone use, microwave use, radio broadcasting and medical tests over a lifetime is less than a thousandth of what we get from the sun, and the amount we get from nuclear power plants is somewhere between zero and immeasurably small. The radiation we get from the sun, not to mention underground radon reserves, is what they're talking about.
** That's true and was initially what I assumed, but other than radon gas in the air the largest source of background radiation is rocks in the ground and buildings. Surely living underground would compensate for the lack of cosmic radiation?
*** In which case they didn't fail to develop such a resistance, but lost it over the years, since they used to live on the surface.
* In Time Paradox, why don't Opal, the pixie twins, and Holly suffer 'trespasser sickness' when they're inside Fowl Manor in the past?
** The narration mentioned that Opal used her super-charged magic to suppress the sickness. As for Holly, well, it's still Artemis' home, so the older Artemis may have given her an implied invitation by bringing her through the tunnel with him. No idea about the Brills, though.
*** Yeah, just checked and the sickness doesn't affect Opal because she's so full of magic she can fight it off with little effect. Pixie twins still remain unexplained.
*** It's possible Opal somehow shields them, or maybe the twins have already lost their magic. They are crooks after all.
*** Unlikely, Opal doesn't care much for the hired help.
*** Wait, but didn't N01 removed the 'trespasser sickness' spell in between ''The Lost Colony'' and ''The Time Paradox''?
*** He did, but it should still apply to Fowl Manor when Holly and Artemis are in the past.
** For Holly, doesn't it say it no longer affects fairies because it was ruled unnecessary? Perhaps that simply stuck when she went back in time, as part of her own 'personal timeline'. Alternatively, perhaps having no. 1's magic helped, since it's different than normal magic.
* In The Time Paradox, why does Artemis not have any form of recall occur during the book? Toward the end, Artemis (from 8-years in the past) is mind wiped, and sent back to his time. When Artemis (the older version) goes back in time, he should have began having partial or total recall of his wiped memories as the story progresses. He shouldn't have needed to guess that Opal was behind the plot, he should have known.
** Because that wipe was ''by No 1'', who, we're told, is not far off functionally omnipotent. Even after re-experiencing ''all'' the events of TTP older!Artemis doesn't remember his part as a 10-year-old.
* If the People all live underground(and presumably have lived there for countless generations)why do they have a tendency for darker skins? Aren't they supposed to be really, really pale? I don't know a whole lot about biology, so can someone please explain this to me?
** How dark your skin is is not just a question of tanning, it's also how much melanin you have naturally occurring in your skin. How many black people do you know who turned white after moving to England? And it also says that sprites and goblins are green.
*** And before anyone argues with the above troper that it happened to humans (over many generations), Faeries can only reproduce once every eighty years and Holly is only a couple of generations removed from Cupid, so they haven't had time for natural selection to make much difference for things that only matter a ''tiny'' bit).
** The naturally selective disadvantage of dark skin for humans in climes that aren't sunny is vitamin D absorption -- harsh sun doesn't ''cause'' dark skin on a genetic/racial level, it's just a selective pressure for it. Since The People have been an industrial society for longer than humanity has existed, were nocturnal to begin with, and I don't think you get much vitamin D from artificial lights, vitamin D has probably not been a significant selective pressure. Conversely, one possible selective ''advantage'' of darker skin is camouflage. However, it's only elves we're specifically told are brown-skinned: sprites and goblins are green, all the pixies described are pale, and there's been no description I recall of centaur or dwarf skin tone, unless they're mentioned in TAC, which I haven't been able to get a hold of yet.
*** Not entirely true. Methylated portions of DNA can activate or inactivate genes within a single generation, which can then be passed down to offspring. Lamarck wasn't entirely wrong.
* Artemis is a known computer genius. So when Butler opens up Artemis's laptop and double-clicks a video, the default video player is...Quicktime?!
** Speaking from admitted ignorance of Quicktime's flaws: He ''made'' it work right.
* Accepting that fairies can erase memories and that the human mind will fill in the blanks itself, surely it is unlikely to the point of practical impossibility that Artemis, Butler and Juliet would all have matching replacement memories, right? What did Foaly think would happens when Artemis mentions an event to Butler, and they both have totally different memories of what happened that day?
** They also adjust memories as new events crop up. People have not noticed words on their computer screen changing right in front of their eyes because they were changed during saccades.
* Why can't Colfer [[MagicAIsMagicA make up his mind about how magic revocation works]]? In Arctic Incident, magic revoked Mulch uses the "gift of tongues" to sic the guard dogs on a human guard during a botched heist. Fine, maybe GOT is magic creature trait independent of magic. But then, in Atlantis Complex, the mercenary dwarf can't use GOT BECAUSE HE'S MAGIC REVOKED and had to teach himself rudimentary English. Even Mulch later makes an offhand comment about his "efforts to use Humanese." This is quite a {{Retcon}}.
*** Mulch still had the tiny spark of magic unnecessary to speak in tongues. TLC stated this when he spoke in French to Beau Paradizo. He may have spent most of it as time went by, but learned "Humanese" for survival as an exile. Most criminals without magic seem to; the dwarf Butler went up against in TAC understood some words, and Turnball didn't have a problem talking to Lenore.
*** So how is it that Holly who never lost her magic couldn't speak to the gorilla in the Time Paradox because she was running low? There's still a contradiction there.
** And can he figure out how faeries age? Holly's, what, in her eighties, and yet people still sometimes say that 1000 is really young, but 2000 is the oldest faerie, but Mulch was alive to see the Temple of Artemis, but some characters refer to the first hundred years as being a baby/toddler... gah!
** It was Artemis saying that 1000 years old is really young ''before he got the Book'' and the sprite could be bluffing/really drunk and he got the ages believable within the same species. Opal is the only pixie with a known age, Number 1 is 14 and Qwan is only 10 000 because he was a rock for most of it. Holly is 80 and a legal adult while Vinyaya is 400 and nearly middle aged (they're different species, they don't grow and age in the same ratios and might spend 20 years as a child, 50 years as a teenager and 1500 years as an adult)
*** It's not uncommon for human beings to call, say, thirty years of age relatively young, although you're well into adulthood by then. 1000 could be the fairy 30s.
** Also, the first few books claimed that the ''mesmer'' required the least magic of everything fairies could do. But in the Time Paradox, Holly said that she didn't have enough magic to use the mesmer, while she did have enough for a small healing.
* In Arctic incident, Opal disables the LEP blasters because when she was upgrading them she installed a dot of "Sodder" that was actually a chemical mix that explodes when hit by a ceratin frequency, understandable, but if that's the case why did the blasters fix themselves when the group shut off the broadcast? Shouldn't have exploded, damaged the blasters, and that's that?
** Err, they didn't. The ones disabled by the solder beads are the Neutrino Sidearms. The Police Plaza DNA cannons were disabled by, essentially, Hacking into Foaly's System and turning them off. When the group shut down the broadcast, all they essentially did was give the on switch back to Foaly, so it worked out fine. Besides, Part of Opal's master plan involved the immediate reactivation of the Cannons once certain conditions are met, so it kinda makes sense that they'd, you know, make sure they can be reactivated.
* Why didn't Foaly just take the clone's fingerprints as confirmation? Maybe the Retimager isn't considered proper evidence in court, but surely fingerprints are! For that matter, if Opal is such a genius, why did she bother with the clone scheme? Anybody as smart as her would realize the fingerprint problem!
** It's possible that fairy clones don't have the fingerprint problem. After all, they're made differently. Clones made by humans have to be implanted in a womb, be born, and grow up like all humans do. Fairy clones can be grown in a greenhouse in only two years. Maybe fairies can also make a more exact copy of someone.
*** The fingerprints would have just said "Opal Koboi." Foaly needed to prove that Opal had ''replaced'' herself with a clone and so used the Retimager to look at the clone's corneas.
*** What I believe the first troper means is that it in fact ''wouldn't'' have said "Opal Koboi" fingerprints are affected, but not completely defined by genetic code (that's why identical twins don't have identical fingerprints). Therefore, the clone would have different fingerprints than the original, proving thus that the real Opal had escaped.
** Given all the other science problems in the series, I think we can say for sure that Colfer has no idea how real clones work.
* Why didn't Holly bother to even attempt to save Root in the Time Paradox? I mean, she's talking to him in the past and she and Artemis are already changing the future by communicating with Mulch, so why not just give the commander a little heads up. "Hey, this'll sound crazy but if you're ever in a situation where there are goblins setting up battery smuggling in an abandoned hanger, don't go in alone because it might just be a trap set by a crazy pixie." I mean really? Nothing? Just {{Too Cool To Live}}, eh?
** The timeline would conceivably hold provided they warned Mulch not to mention any of this ever again. They can't make a major change to the timeline like that. Foaly even mentions this when venting his objections to Artemis' plan - "maybe Holly should save Julius Root from ever being killed?"
** Concerning Mulch; Artemis and Holly can't read minds. For all they know, Mulch has been keeping this secret from them for all these years. Admittedly, he'd have had to be very good to do so, but it's conceivable, and can hold up with Artemis' beliefs about time travel (that [[YouAlreadyChangedThePast the past has already been changed]]). They do know for sure that Root is dead, so saving him definitely ''would'' be meddling.
** And don't forget, Koboi scrubbed Mulch's mind of all memories of the past three days near the end of the book.
* Here's one that goes all the way back to the first book: Why don't the fairies know that you can escape a time-stop by being asleep? Here's my reasoning: San D'Klass [[HowCanSantaDeliverAllThoseToys had his wizards stop time]] in order to deliver gifts to the humans. While people were sleeping. Therefore the fairies should have noticed that they were delivering presents to empty houses and figured out that sleeping people could skip the time-stop. Unless Foaly's upgrades to time-stop technology changed something?
** It's explained that you escape the time stop by changing your state of consciousness. So if you are asleep when the time stop begins it's impossible to wake up. Likewise if you are awake it's impossible to go to sleep. Artemis tried something unexpected and tranquilized himself, which the fairies could never have predicted.
* In the first book, Artemis, Butler, and Juliet ''[[FridgeHorror drink champagne mixed with sleeping pills]],'' which you'd think a "genius" like Arty would realize is a big medical no-no. I mean, just take a look at Creator/HeathLedger.
** It wasn't necessarily ''real'' champagne. Artemis took charge of the bottle, after all, who's to say he didn't change the contents earlier? Saying "Let's celebrate with water!" would have been a bit obvious, and Butler and Juliet didn't really have time to react after drinking it.
* In Book 3, Artemis claimed he couldn't make a fingerprint copy with his perfect memory gel. Why couldn't he make the inverse copy, and then press gel against that copy to reverse the inverse copy? It would create a fingerprint identical to the original.
** An inverse copy of an inverse copy wouldn't be accurate enough, I suppose.
*** Or memory gel can't copy other memory gel and just sticks to it instead
*** Why not just get a thin piece of memory gel and then flip it over?
*** Because it would be a flat. The gel scanner needed ridges. Even if you thin it out, the reverse side would still be flat.
** I was always bugged by why it was reversed to begin with. Shouldn't the gel's pattern have matched Spiro's thumb ridge-for-ridge?
*** There were ridges where there should have been valleys and valleys where there should have been ridges. It was the wrong way around. If you need a visual example, get some clay or Play-Doh or something and press a coin into it. See how the imprint is basically a mirror image of the coin? It's the same basic concept.
** They're using the flip side, and despite their genius, can't think why they can use the right side.
*** Spiro's thumb has the print right way around. Side A of the memory gel, which they press against his thumb, has his thumbprint in reverse. Side B of the memory gel is either smooth, or has a smudged skin pattern from whichever person took the thumbprint. What "flip side" and "right side" are you talking about?
*** Thank you! That was bothering me, but I couldn't figure out how to word it.
*** But the whole point of memory latex is that it makes a perfect copy on the outside of the bandage, so that they can be hidden and (presumably) allow the wearer to operate fingerprint sensitive stuff without removing a bandage. Put it on, the bandage reads the thumb print and reshapes the other side to be the same as the thumb. So side B would look exactly like Spiro's thumb!
*** Where did you get that information? I'm fairly certain that they ''never'' said that in the book.
*** Alternatively, it would have just collapsed when pressed to the thumb reader. Artemis' plan was never to use the memory gel, it was to use Spiro's thumb. It's just that his plan was ''also'' to trick the fairies into helping him, because he knew they would never go along with it.
* In The Lost Colony, Abbot uses the mesmer on the council, and later Basset. Colfer acknowledges the second time that this is against fairy law - so how come he is not penalised for it?
** He was a demon? Or he was if you think that getting put in a rodent is punishment.
*** Abbot is using stolen magic to begin with. Presumably, that's a loophole in the rules. Most instances of punishment due to magical law-breaking involve the ''law-breaker's'' magic acting up, which wouldn't affect Abbot if it's not his own magic.
*** The demon island was separated from Earth and sent into an alternate dimension before the laws of magic were magically enforced. Also, I don't recall Opal losing her magic just because she mesmerized other fairies, so the fairy law in question would be the legal type. If he's the supreme ruler dominating the rest of the ruling body, there is no one to punish him, and if they didn't have that rule anyways (due to him being the only one with magic), then that law applies to him as much as murder laws in the United States apply in Iran, for example. Oh, and as the second poster said, ''he was imprisoned in a rodent's body and humiliated for the rest of his natural life''. I think that counts as punishment for a demon who was very proud of his physical prowess and highly egocentric.
** I don't think it is a legal system, I thought it was a natural reaction. The punishments shown for breaking the rules elsewhere in the series range from nausea to losing one's magic entirely (see Mulch), and there is no mention of that being instigated by a legal body, ''or'' that it's some kind of symbolic karmic force, but instead it is portrayed as an automatic, generic consequence. The stolen magic loophole seems to cover it, but the question still applies to Opal. Still, entries above have already noted that Colfer isn't particularly consistent.
** It may be that there are Laws of Magic (do not go into a human building), and just rules (do not use the mesmer on other fairies).
* So, in ''Colony'', two demons ask No1 if he's going to warp today or are pink flowers going to grow out of one of their armpits. Yet, later in that same book, when No1 is being interrogated by Minerva, he claims that demons never use the word "pink". So, which is true?
** Well, he N[[superscript:o]]1 ''did'' lose a couple gigabytes of his memory when he came to Earth. Maybe he forgot about all the times other demons said the word "pink".
** In my copy at least, the demons just ask if flowers are going to grow from their armpits. No mention of the colour.
* Why didn't they just kill the future Opal BEFORE she became all powerful? Are they just unwilling to kill? Even a dangerous psychopath who will definitely kill if she gets free?
** Why is it strange that they don't have capital punishment? That's nothing remarkable; there are dangerous psychopaths in human jails who are being kept alive, it's not surprising the fairies do the same. Besides, they had her locked up securely. Remember, she was getting more psychotic as time went on; you can't blame them for not predicting that [[spoiler: she would murder her younger self]], and she wouldn't have escaped if she hadn't. By the time they realised that, yes, she really ''was'' that insane, it was too late.
*** I was talking about right before they put her in the reactor, when they DID know what she was planning. Why let the psychopath live when her options are death or godhood? And if there was nobody to threaten her henchman then they might have backed down and the paradox destruction could have been avoided as well!
*** The only ones willing to kill her in cold blood are the heroes in Haven. She's in Atlantis. They don't have time to go over there and kill her, and ordering the wardens to do so wouldn't have worked.
* So how exactly did Holly cure Angeline Fowl in the first book? The entire plot is based on the fact that she was gone because of the sleeping pills, yet apparently Holly used her magic to get rid of her condition.
** It explains in the third book that she imbued Fowl Manor with magic which would then naturally target anyone in the vicinity for the next few days.
* In the first book, why does Cudgeon not escape the time stop when Root tranquilizes him with the finger dart? Surely he should have escaped the time stop the same way the Fowls and Butlers did.
* Exactly how is [=LEPrecon=] a reconnaissance organization? They sound like an ordinary police force to me. Is the "recon" connection just to make a joke work?
** They are a reconnaissance branch of the LEP, but we don't see too much of them. The main member we do see is Holly, who tends to go too far with the duty.
* On that note, "[=LEPrecon=]" is a pretty cute joke, but it makes no sense. The pun only works in English, and the word "leprechaun" comes from Gaelic. And, putting aside that their uniforms used to be more traditional, if "leprechauns" are actually a badass police force, why is it folklore remembers them as humble shoemakers?
** I'm guessing RuleOfFunny is meant to make us overlook some of it.
*** Also, humans wouldn't know that they're a badass police force. All they see is little people with magic running around, and folklore does the rest. Also, oral history is ''terrible'' when it comes to retaining details.
* In ''The Last Guardian'', the Fowls are said to be repeat offenders in the 'try to capture a fairy' business. Artemis' father once held a dwarf hostage. So how is it that when LEP learned that an Artemis Fowl had captured an elf and was demanding gold for her return, they had to look the family up from ''human'' records? You'd think after several centuries of Fowls involving themselves in Fairy affairs and consequently getting mind-wiped, they'd have a thick stack of files on the family, the kind of people they keep on retainer, their household, and a number of other things in their own records. Especially since many people in LEP (Root openly claimed to have been around in the 'top hat and shillelagh days') are old enough to remember the previous cases.
** Probably Colfer just threw that in for a laugh.
* Why do the fairies assume that humans will attack them? I am aware of the Unpleasant Business that happened 10,000 years ago, but if they have been monitoring us since then, surely they would know most of modern humanity would over the moon (or at least pleasantly surprised) to find other sentient life. I am assuming this Like Reality Unless Otherwise Noted.
** Prejudice takes a long time to get over in human societies; how much more so amongst the fairies, whose longer lifespans mean that it's been many fewer generations since Taillte. As with certain groups of humans today in some parts of the world, they are taught from the cradle that Mud Men are vicious, evil, etc, that their current situation is entirely due to Mud Man oppression, and never have any positive contact with the "oppressors" to change that bias, if they interact at all. Of those fairies who do interact with humans, they're usually either LEP agents who do nothing but mind-wipes, or else rogues like Mulch or Turnball. Notwithstanding the latter group, Holly's probably the first fairy in centuries to actually make friends with a human.
* Butler didn't tell Artemis his first name to maintain professional distance. So why doesn't that rule apply to Juliet?
** Because she's not (or at least wasn't intended to be) his bodyguard. There's even a line in Book 3, I believe, where Butler lampshades this when saying that she wouldn't be able to be his full-time bodyguard.
* So according to the Arctic Incident, the Fairies put water through at least three high powered filters to "purge the Mud Man from it." How do they expect to get any nutrients out of that? As far as I'm aware, the more you purify water the more nutrients you loose and if they really have to filter it as much as they imply they might as well not drink it as it will be tasteless and lacking in nutrients.
** They have special high-tech filters?
** Perhaps because they drink water not for nutrients or taste, but for hydration, like most people.
* What counts as a human dwelling? Say, for example, if a house is on sale and nobody is living there. Does it still count as a dwelling? Or what if a house is completely leveled but still owned by someone?
** Per the short stories, when the house no longer stands, the fairy is free. Holly demolishes an abandoned hut that a fairy criminal with no magic was using as a base. Root and Trouble Kelp, who the crook had dragged in, didn't count as invited into the dwelling because they were brought in by a fairy.
* Changing your state of consciousness supposedly allows a person to leave the time stop. Except that during the Fowl Manor siege, multiple characters are knocked unconscious and wake up, and instead of being whisked away, they stay right where they are. Butler is noted to be knocked unconscious by Mulch's gas expulsion, and he almost certainly loses consciousness again when gored by the troll and near death. Root tranquilizes Cudgeon with a dart, and Butler knocks out several members of Trouble's squad during their scuffle. Why didn't any of them vanish??
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