I'm disappointed because The Third Gate ended up being a very different book than the one I was expecting, based on the summary. I expected to be reading about an archeological team plagued by curses after opening a pharaoh's tomb, and instead what I got was an archeological team being plagued by curses while searching for a pharaoh's tomb. At first blush, it's not a big difference, but when the tomb is opened after the halfway point instead of during the first couple of chapters as I expected, the curse becomes more about equipment failures and unexplained sightings of ghostly ladies and weird stuff about near death experiences, instead of swarms of scorpions or booby traps or other cool stuff.
So yeah, I was really disappointed by the lackluster start. The first six chapters just felt like a complete waste of time, setting up a backstory that could've easily been fit in later. And the near death experience angle, while important to the climax and ending, just really felt like a weird inclusion for most of the book. At first, I was really wondering what the hell CTS had to do with the story at all. The book really didn't get interesting until Jeremy Logan gets to the Sudd, the massive swamp that's the supposed location of the tomb, and didn't get really good until the team finally enters the tomb. But by then, more than half the book's gone by, and there really wasn't enough time or pages to pile on the action and then wrap up the plot in a satisfying way like I expected.
I have to say though, Child really did his research. I was completely engrossed by his descriptions of the tomb, of the grave goods, of the mummy even, that was what I was expecting out of this book. His choice of the Sudd as the backdrop to the story's a creative masterstroke, really added an interesting flavor to an atypical mummy's curse book, but at the same time it makes no sense whatsoever. Child's meticulous and detailed in explaining a lot of other things, the construction of the tomb, the science behind the excavation, and I just couldn't believe he leaves out any sort of explanation for how Narmer manages to build his tomb in the Sudd, in South Sudan, hundreds of miles from Egypt, and that detail just nagged at me through the entire book.
And then, just like that, it was all over. I mean, the whole thing reminded of an action/adventure movie where you could see the end coming far before getting there, and I just wanted a bit more action before everything goes down, and that just never happens. And the ending ended up being really opened ended; the entire curse thing turned out really mediocre and unsatisfying, meh.