Showing posts with label hatshepsut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hatshepsut. Show all posts

Hatshepsut, His Majesty, Herself Review

Hatshepsut, His Majesty, Herself
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"Hatshepsut, His Majesty, Herself" is a very good book for children or people who just want a straight forward history of the first succesful female pharoah in ancient Egypt. This was the first book I read of Hatshepsut and I enjoyed it alot. It encouraged me to begin to learn more about her. She was truly a great ruler and worth investigating further. The book consists of a basic history of Hatshepsut and her accomplishments. If you liked this book check out a longer young adult novel "His Majesty, Queen Hatshepsut" by 'Dorothy Sharp Carter'.

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Thutmose III: The Military Biography of Egypt's Greatest Warrior King Review

Thutmose III: The Military Biography of Egypt's Greatest Warrior King
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This book reads like a book that was cobbled together over a weekend because the author needed the money. Indeed, large chunks are cut and pasted nearly verbatim from Gabriel's other books. Worse, it is poorly executed and cries out for a proofreader. Silly errors make it difficult to have confidence in the information provided. For example: on page 54 where Gabriel writes, "[In Egypt] Except for a few places in the Nile Delta, there are no wide-open plains upon which to maneuver [chariots] *as there were in Canaan* and Syria. Yet on page 74 *"Canaan offered few smooth plains* where, the opportunities for wide-ranging maneuver and speed provided dividends." Which was it? On page 92 Thutmose captured 924 enemy chariots but on the very next page only 892 were captured. After praising the Egyptian six-spoked chariot wheel on page 59 we discover on page 75 that "The Canaanite chariot was heavier than the Egyptian vehicle *because* of its four- or six-spoked wheels." How is that exactly? These kinds of errors leave the reader wondering about the accuracy of the rest of the material. [* emphasis added]

It also fails because of unnecessary hyperbole used to build Thutmose III up and justify writing the book. Gabriel takes pains to regularly mention Thutmose's brilliance, but the most excessive hyperbole occurs early in the book. In comparing Thutmose favorably to Alexander the Great Gabriel writes; "If the greatness of a field commander is judged by the ability of the enemy he faces . . . then compared to Alexander, Thutmose must rank as the greater field commander." That is nonsense as judged by Gabriel's own criteria. The evidence provided in his book describes Thutmose's "battles" as skirmishes against inferior opposition. Certainly Thutmose was an admirable military leader but, as Gabriel's own book shows, he was no Alexander. Indeed, one significant question that goes unexamined is why there was so little serious resistance to Thutmose's raids.
Finally, some of the sentences and even paragraphs just don't make sense. The text is sometimes repetitious and appears poorly organized. Occasionally, the pictures don't reflect the equipment Gabriel describes. All of these things reflect the little effort put into the book. Save your money and don't reward Gabriel for foisting "Thutmose III" on an unsuspecting public.

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In the course of his thirty-two-year reign over ancient Egypt, Thutmose III fought an impressive seventeen campaigns. He fought more battles over a longer period of time and experienced more victories than Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar did. Despite Thutmose III's surprisingly illustrious record, his name does not command the same immediate recognition as these highly visible military leaders.In Thutmose III, Richard Gabriel deftly brings to life the character and ability of ancient Egypt's warrior king and sheds light on Thutmose's key contributions to Egyptian history. Considered the father of the Egyptian navy, Thutmose created the first combat navy in the ancient world and built an enormous shipyard near Memphis to construct troop, horse, and supply transports to support his campaigns in Syria and Iraq. He also reformed the army, establishing a reliable conscript base, creating a professional officer corps, equipping it with modern weapons, and integrating chariotry's combat arm into new tactical doctrines. Politically, he introduced strategic principles of national security that guided Egyptian diplomatic, commercial, and military policies for half a millennium and created the Egyptian empire.Through these crowning achievements, Thutmose set into motion events that shaped and influenced the Levant and Egypt for the next four hundred years. His reign can be regarded as a watershed in the military and imperial history of the entire eastern Mediterranean.

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Truth is the Soul of the Sun - A Biographical Novel of Hatshepsut-Maatkare Review

Truth is the Soul of the Sun - A Biographical Novel of Hatshepsut-Maatkare
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Maria Isabel Pita has accomplished a true feat in her book TRUTH IS THE SOUL OF THE SUN (the name of the book is a translation of Hatshepsut-Maatkare's name) - a book of obviously demanding research coupled with a degree of fictionalized spaces where more is not known, 'more' in this case being the sensual side of the queen who history has proven to be the most powerful female ever known. Pita takes 550 pages to tell her story: reading this book takes a big commitment of time. Not that Pita does not write well (she in fact writes with a fine sense of flow of thoughts along with her careful documentation of facts), but the story is about Egypt and requires so many names of persons and gods and ideas that keeping the story straight is, at times, problematic.
But for those who love Egyptian history this biographical novel is a treasure trove. Not only does Pita give us the strangely startling emergence of Hatshepsut to the place of royalty and eventually the role of the Female Falcon who ruled Egypt as one as closely tied to divinity as any of her predecessors or subsequent rulers, but she also is able to fashion a rather incredible picture of a woman who was adored on many levels - including the compete allegiance of the men of Egypt. There are sufficient forays into her sensual side to satisfy the reader who prefers 'doctored historical fiction', but the achievement here is a work that pulls together the fragments of knowledge about a phenomenal queen into one significant survey. The book many be a bit too long and demanding for the casual reader, but for those who relish a good story about an important historical figure from ancient Egypt, this is a good read. Grady Harp, November 09

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Mara, Daughter of the Nile (Puffin Story Books) Review

Mara, Daughter of the Nile (Puffin Story Books)
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Mara is a wonderful heroine for young girls. Set in the time of Hatshepsut, Pharoah of Egypt, this small novel brings to life a distant era with remarkable clarity. McGraw has crafted her vision of the period around an exciting palace intrigue. The character of Mara, a young slave girl, is an excellent example for young women and it is remarkable to find in a book that was written in the 1950s. If you know a young woman of 9 to 14, give her this book.
This is one of the best books that I have ever read - how fortunate that it is still in print after all these years! I first encountered this excellent novel in 1961. I read it at least 20 times. I was too poor to purchase, so I copied the book out in about 10 school scribblers. True! When my daughter was 10, I bought a copy for her and another for myself.
McGraw's interpretation of the era can easily be faulted, but her sense of "Egypt" cannot. This book sent me on an investigative journey into the subject of Egyptology that has been a distinct pleasure all my life. I highly recommend this wonderful tale.

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The adventures of an ingenious Egyptian slave girl who undertakes a dangerous assignment as a spy in the royal palace of Thebes, in the days when Queen Hatshepsut ruled.

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Poisoner of Ptah (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries 6) Review

Poisoner of Ptah (Ancient Egyptian Mysteries 6)
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If you have been following PC Doherty's Amerotke series, about a judge/ investigator for the Pharaoh, this is by far the book with the most depth to it. The plot is more developed and convoluted, and there are more characters. As with all of the series it is set in the ancient Egypt of Pharoah Hatusu, (about 1473-1458 BC), who is better known by the name of Hatshepsut and is most famous as the female Pharoah who ruled alone and not just as a figure-head, in a time of peace and prosperity. This is such an interesting time I wish Doherty would put more effort into the setting and the era and of how it must have been to have a woman ruler---everyone seems to take it for granted she was totally accepted, which seems to me as doubtful. Also, the question of her commoner lover, Senenmut---that is, everyone from her time to ours assumes he was her lover---of course he would have caused hate, envy and jealousy. It would be interesting to have some of the volumes cover these issues. Doherty covered the Akhenaten/Tutankhamun era so well in his trilogy "An Evil Spirit Out of the West", The Season of the Hyaena" and "The Year of the Cobra", I wish he would turn these rather light mystery novels into something of the sort as he did with the era of Pharaohs Akhenaten/Tutankhamun in the trilogy just mentioned. But, those were larger, in depth and more serious novels and this series is definitly more easy, quick, mysteries, the previous ones to be read at a couple of sittings, but never the less enjoyable. I also wish more effort was put into Amerotke, his wife and family. One never feels as though one really knows him even after all the books so far. I have little feeling if any of what he looks like for example, or of the real relationship between his wife and himself, she and the children are shadow characters to be pulled out every so often to assure us he has a happy family. Having said THAT though, Doherty does excell at making you feel you are IN ancient Egypt, at bringing to life the sights, sounds, images of the place.
In part the problem MAY be that the author is such a prolific writer, go to his web site, under several names he has written over 50 books, all set in historical eras, (he is a historian) but how anyone can keep up such a pace is mind boggling!! I wish he would slow down, settle on a time (such a my favorite ancient Egypt) and write a real masterpiece!!!
To clarify the order of the series of Amertoke is: 1.The Mask of Ra 2.The Horus Killings 3.The Anubis Slayings 4.Slayers of Seth 5. Assassins of Isis 6.Poisoner of Ptah. (All titles refer to an Egyptian god or goddess).

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A new novel of murder in the reign of Pharoah Hatusu featuring Judge Amerotke as the crime-solver. At a peace treaty signing between Egypt and Libya in Thebes, three of Egypt's leading scribes die violently on the Temple forecourt, the victims of a vile poisoning. To add to the mounting unease, a prosperous merchant and his young wife are found drowned. Rumours soon sweep the imperial city. The Poisoner of Ptah has returned. It falls to Amerotke, Chief Judge of the Halls of Two Truths, to investigate these hideous crimes - his hunt for the Poisoner leads him to discover yet more suspicion and potential danger. This story sees the Judge pit his wits against a cunning opponent who seems intent on spreading his death-dealing powders. Amerotke enters the twilight world of glorious Thebes where life can be so rich and yet death so swift and brutal.

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