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Tales of Secret Egypt

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First U. S. Edition bound in green cloth with blue lettering. A Very Good copy. The cloth covers are rubbed at the spine tips and at the outer corners. Spine slant. Rubbing to the spine edges. Mild dust spotting to to the endpapers and toning to the pages. Decent copy.

313 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1918

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About the author

Sax Rohmer

492 books124 followers
AKA Arthur Sarsfield Ward (real name); Michael Furey.

Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward (15 February 1883 - 1 June 1959), better known as Sax Rohmer, was a prolific English novelist. He is best remembered for his series of novels featuring the master criminal Dr. Fu Manchu.

Born in Birmingham to a working class family, Rohmer initially pursued a career as a civil servant before concentrating on writing full-time.

He worked as a poet, songwriter, and comedy sketch writer in Music Hall before creating the Sax Rohmer persona and pursuing a career writing weird fiction.

Like his contemporaries Algernon Blackwood and Arthur Machen, Rohmer claimed membership to one of the factions of the qabbalistic Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Rohmer also claimed ties to the Rosicrucians, but the validity of his claims has been questioned. His physician and family friend, Dr. R. Watson Councell may have been his only legitimate connection to such organizations. It is believed that Rohmer may have exaggerated his association in order to boost his literary reputation as an occult writer.

His first published work came in 1903, when the short story The Mysterious Mummy was sold to Pearson's Weekly. He gradually transitioned from writing for Music Hall performers to concentrating on short stories and serials for magazine publication. In 1909 he married Rose Elizabeth Knox.

He published his first novel Pause! anonymously in 1910. After penning Little Tich in 1911 (as ghostwriter for the Music Hall entertainer) he issued the first Fu Manchu novel, The Mystery of Dr. Fu-Manchu, was serialized from October 1912 - June 1913. It was an immediate success with its fast-paced story of Denis Nayland Smith and Dr. Petrie facing the worldwide conspiracy of the 'Yellow Peril'. The Fu Manchu stories, together with his more conventional detective series characters—Paul Harley, Gaston Max, Red Kerry, Morris Klaw, and The Crime Magnet—made Rohmer one of the most successful and well-paid authors of the 1920s and 1930s.

Rohmer also wrote several novels of supernatural horror, including Brood of the Witch-Queen. Rohmer was very poor at managing his wealth, however, and made several disastrous business decisions that hampered him throughout his career. His final success came with a series of novels featuring a female variation on Fu Manchu, Sumuru.

After World War II, the Rohmers moved to New York only returning to London shortly before his death. Rohmer died in 1959 due to an outbreak of influenza ("Asian Flu").

There were thirteen books in the Fu Manchu series in all (not counting the posthumous The Wrath of Fu Manchu. The Sumuru series consist of five books.

His wife published her own mystery novel, Bianca in Black in 1954 under the pen name, Elizabeth Sax Rohmer. Some editions of the book mistakenly credit her as Rohmer's daughter. Elizabeth Sax Rohmer and Cay Van Ash, her husband's former assistant, wrote a biography of the author, Master of Villainy, published in 1972.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Mike.
511 reviews140 followers
December 28, 2014
The review from afar – No. 14

Re-revised forward to these overseas reviews:
Since emulating a yo-yo, I continue to rely on the old-style Kindle 3G for any non-technical reading. I tip my hat to the fine folks at Project Gutenberg: virtually every title I have or will be reading in the near future comes from them.


Tales of Secret Egypt is another collection of short stories by prolific author Sax Rohmer that does not involve his arch-fiend Fu Manchu. Set in and around Cairo primarily these tales involve the clash of people and culture from West and East. Of course in Rohmer’s world the Western (White) man is going to be superior to and more able than the Eastern man virtually every time. (There are exceptions to this as I noted in my review of his other collection, The Haunting of Low Fennel: see the story “The Turquoise Necklace”.)

In my year-end frenzy to write reviews for the several books I read during the past few months I’m going to be very brief and skip individual story essays for now.

The book is divided into two sections.

The first six tales all feature a for-profit, English relic hunter and his nemesis (sort of) Abu Tabah. Kernaby is an old Egyptian hand and treats Cairo as he would London or Paris not afraid to go when and where he is required. On the other hand the Imam Abu Tabah is a respected and feared individual who not only holds authority from his holiness, but is said to be a master magician. Time and time again he manipulates events and Kernaby himself to deprive the agent of the treasures that belong to Egypt. (Another example of the Easterner being able to outwit the Westerner.)

The rest of the tales are a mish-mash of Cairo-based stories and they have no common protagonist. They do continue with the mystical elements of the East as in the first six. In a few places the story revolves around the supernatural more than the human element. Where Rohmer collected his knowledge isn’t identified, but he is clearly fascinated with the culture and strives to paint a world that allures the reader and his own characters.

Part I - Tales of Abu Tabah
The Yashmak of Pearls
The Death-Ring of Sneferu
The Lady of the Lattice
Omar of Ispahan
Breath of Allah
The Whispering Mummy

Part II - Other Tales
Lord of the Jackals
Lure of Souls
The Secret of Ismail
Harun Pasha
In the Valley of the Sorceress
Pomegranate Flower

I enjoyed the stories for the most part. Having read a lot of Rohmer in one long and stretched out series I tend to ignore the racist elements that are there and often form the backbone of others’ reviews. It’s there and so are other elements that I think were deliberately used to entice readers. Remember Rohmer was a very successful author and wrote to earn money, not to change the world (except for “The Orchard of Tears.) So, his opinions and attitudes both reflect and rely on British Colonialism as well as the hunger of his readers for outré and sensationalist literature. I might re-read this collection some day.

Three (3.0) solid Stars for the intrigue and the fun of watching Abu Tabah outsmart, outwit, and best Pasha Kernaby.

You can get this book for free from the Gutenberg Project site.
12 reviews
September 17, 2014
Most of the stories are about the same two characters,Iman Abu-Tabah, and his friend, an unnamed, unscrupulous Englishman who works on commission for a shady company called Moses, Murphy &Co."purveyors of fake antiquities". Abu-Tabah is a very likable Muslim clergyman, kindly and tolerant, not at all fanatic. His relationship with the Englishman is like that of kindly adult towards a mischievous child of whom he is very fond but knows that he can't be trusted for one moment. More than once he thwarts the Englishman's plans in a firm but gentle manner, sometimes saving his life. Very engaging little stories, very atmospheric and easy to read.
6,726 reviews5 followers
September 22, 2021
Wonderful entertaining listening 🔰😀

Twelve short stories of Egypt will written romantic thriller adventures with lots of interesting will developed characters. The story lines are set in and around Cairo, Egypt, each different and very entertaining. I would recommend this novel to readers of adventure. Enjoy the adventure of reading or listening to books 📚 2021😊
Profile Image for Tentatively, Convenience.
Author 16 books247 followers
June 17, 2013
review of
Sax Rohmer's Tales of Secret Egypt
by tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE - June 17, 2013

My old friend Blaster Al Ackerman, the great writer, cartoonist, mail artist, & trickster philosopher, died on March 17th, 2013. That got me to scanning most of what I have by him in my archive in preparation for a possible bk revolving around our correspondence from 1980 to 1986. THAT led to my making an animated slide-show movie called "This Will Explain" intended for premier at the upcoming memorial event in BalTimOre at Normal's called the "Blasterthon". Somewhere in there I wrote something called "The Truth Can Now Be Told" re Blaster that was published online thanks to Rupert Wondolowski at the Shattered Wig blog spot ( http://shatteredwig.blogspot.com/2013... ) & on HTMLGIANT blog spot ( http://htmlgiant.com/author-spotlight... ). As part of this, Rupert posted a scan of a large postcard illustration from my archive of "Sax Rohmer's Widow" + the verso's collage message. This got me to thinking about Rohmer. Shortly thereafter, I found this 1920 edition on sale at Copacetic Comics so, w/ Blaster in mind, I got it.

On the title page, it says: "Author of "The Insidious Dr. Fu-Manchu," "The Return of Fu-Manchu," "The Hand of Fu-Manchu," "The Yellow Claw," Etc.". This didn't bode well for me insofar as it reeks of 'Yellow Peril' popaganda [pun intended]. As I very vaguely recall the character of Fu-Manchu from old movies, he's the archetypal diabolical criminal character - similar, perhaps, to Dr. Mabuse - an unusually tall Chinese man. Wd Tales of Secret Egypt be like Mickey Spillane w/ Egyptians instead of Communists as the villains? Thankfully, no - at least not exactly.

The bk's divided into 2 parts: "Tales of Abu Tabah" & "Other Tales". The 'protagonist' of "Tales of Abu Tabah" is Kernaby Pasha - the latter word being an honorific in Egypt at the time equivalent to the British "Lord" - presumably applied here to the Kernaby character not b/c he occupies any political position but b/c he's a wealthy Englishmen living in Egypt. Kernaby Pasha represents the firm of "Messrs. Moses, Murphy & Co., of Birmingham" & is a thoroughly greedy scoundrel. As such, he's an anti-hero - Abu Tabah, on the other hand, is gradually built up to be a person who's not only much more clever but also a person w/ much greater integrity. SO, even tho these are more stories of the "Orient", as w/ the Fu-Manchu stories, there seems to be no 'Yellow Peril' here. Given that Rohmer (aka Arthur Henry Sarsfield Ward) was born in Birmingham, Kernaby's depiction as a thieving businessman seems more indicative of a 'British Peril'.

Literary precedents for Rohmer might be Edgar Allen Poe, Theophile Gautier, & Bram Stoker. On the wikipedia bio Arthur Conan Doyle & M. P. Shiel are listed.

The 1st tale begins thusly: "The duhr, or noonday call to prayer, had just sounded from the minarets of the mosques of kalaun and Es-Nasir, and I was idly noting the negligible effect of the adan upon the occupants of the neighboring shops" - this boded well for me b/c I detest religion & see it as a primary cause of the imbecility & brutality that plagues this planet - as such, I'm glad to read of people ignoring the imposition of Pavlovian dogmatic behavior.

In at least 2 places in this bk, Rohmer has characters claiming that Cairo is "as safe as in London and safer than in Paris" (p 5). I know little of Rohmer's life. Born in England, died in the US. No mention of his ever having been to Egypt. Perhaps he went there, perhaps he didn't, perhaps his depiction of Cairo is based entirely on reading bks about it or some such.

Given that the US (where I live) seems to be mostly in conflict w/ Arab cultures these days (9/11, invasion of Afghanistan, invasion of Iraq, etc) & given my extremely limited knowledge of these cultures, even Rohmer's fictionally skewed take on them is welcome - if only as a look at what a popular British writer of a century ago chose to focus on. There're such things as "the sacred burko of the Seyyideh Nefiseh" (p 13) The contemporary transliteration being "burka or burqa" meaning a veil or full body cloak worn by some Muslim women. Rohmer's depiction of the veil is consistently as an alluring feminine accoutrement, my perception of it is more as a suffocatingly repressive tool of the patriarchy.

Kernaby tries to exploit the confused whereabouts of this veil by plotting for his company to "dispose of three duplicates through various channels to wealthy collectors whose enthusiasms were greater than their morality." (p 16)

Rohmer has fun w/ Muslim insults but, alas, it seems that anti-Semitism is taken for granted as an Arab characteristic: ""He is a Jew, and a son of Jews, who eats without washing ! a devourer of pork, and an unclean insect," she cried." Ever on the alert for references to anarchy (usually casually misused by many writers in the same way that Rohmer appears to've casually misused depictions of Chinese people), I was a bit perplexed to read this: "there was nothing about the well-dressed after-dinner throng filling Shepheard's that night to have aroused misgiving in the mind of a cinema anarchist." (p 31)

Rohmer does seem to've 'done his homework' somewhat before writing this material. In 2 places he even uses hieroglyphs. E. A. Wallis Budge, the keeper of Egyptian & Assyrian Antiquities in The British Museum, wd've published his various version of the Egyptian Book of the Dead by the time Rohmer wrote this so I reckon Budge's work might've been a handy source for Rohmer. However, in an admittedly superficial thumbing-thru of my 1960 edition of that, I see no hieroglyph that looks like a seated Anubis in profile holding an Ankh. In Rohmer's tale, this hieroglyph is part of a warning to Kernaby Pasha from Abu Tabah. Perhaps a conventional interpretation of the hieroglyph wd be that Anubis, the jackal-headed god associated with mummification and the afterlife, is holding the key to life - perhaps the key to immortality. It's hard for me to tell here, being no expert on such things, whether Rohmer is actually displaying 'occult' knowledge or just bullshitting.

Rohmer did, obviously have access to some vocabulary that must've been somewhat esoteric in his time (& is STILL esoteric to me): "I recognized that I was about to be treated to an exhibition of darb el-mendel, Abu Tabah being evidently a sahhar, or adept in the art of er-roohanee." (p 52) This strikes me as potentially authentic - but how wd I 'know'?!

Rohmer also references the Iranian poet Hafez: "It was like some gorgeous illustration to a poem by Hafiz, only lacking the figure at the window." (p 98) But the author he may reference the most often isn't Persian or Arabic but British: "In his story Beyond the Pale, Rudyard Kipling has trounced the man who inquires too deeply into native life" (p 114); "It was in those days, then, that I learned as your Rudyard Kipling has also learned that "East is East"; it was in those days that I came face to face with that "mystery of Egypt" about which so much is written, and always will be written, but concerning which so few people, so very few people, know anything whatever." (p 170) "Every Anglo-Indian that I met seemed a figure from the pages of Kipling". (p 195)

Then again, maybe it's "Ibn Sina of Bokhara": ""the perfume was presented in a gold vase, together with the manner of its preparation, by the great wizard and physician Ibn Sina of Bokhara" (Avicenna)." (p 119) "He was said to possess the secrets of Geber and of Avicenna—the great Ibn Sina of Bokhara ; to possess the Philosophers' Stone and the Elixir Vitae." (p 228)

Just as Rohmer seems to have a scholarly bent when spelling 'Avicenna', so, too, does he say in a footnote that "Bedouins" is the "incorrect but familiar spelling". (p 170)

There's apparently some uncertainty of whether Rohmer had any connection to occult societies of his time. There is, tho, as is apparent in his writings, a certainty that he had an ongoing interest in such things:

"You may have heard of the Bedouin song, the 'Mizmune':

""Ya men melek ana deri waat sa jebb
Id el' ish hoos' a beb hatsa azat ta leb."

"You may have heard how when it is sung in a certain fashion, flowers drop from their stalks?" (p 190)

I'm wary of the word "oriental" & Rohmer seems to use it in a way that conflates Asian & Arabic cultures together into an 'exoticism' (in relation to the 'western' world, of course) that I find highly suspect: "I approached the native station master, with whom I was acquainted, and put to him a number of questions respecting his important functions—in which I was not even mildly interested. But to the Oriental mind a direct inquiry is an affront, almost an insult; and to have inquired bluntly the name of the deceased and the manner of his death would have been the best way to have learned nothing whatever about the matter." (p 40) Given that "orient" apparently means "east' & that the world is divided by some into "east" & "west", what I mainly find strange about this is the subjective relativity of it - ie: these terms are only relative to each other: the "West" is east of the "East" & the "East" is west of the "West" if that relativity is perceived from a different direction. After all, the globe is round - it's not like we're talking about the left & right of a bounded square or some such.

Kernaby, being always on the lookout to make as much money as possible to someone else's detriment, still has an ethical code that's somewhat amusing & possibly in keeping w/ a 'stuffy' Englishman: "I disapprove of your morals, Malaglou. My own code may be peculiar, but it does not embrace hashish dealing". (p 82) After a description of a costume party, Kernaby states "Doubtless it was all very amusing, but, personally, I stand by my commonplace dress-suit, having, perhaps, rather a ridiculous sense of dignity." (p 97) Later, he justifies some industrial espionage (""We would ask you," ran the communication, "to renew your inquiries into the particular composition of the perfume 'Breath of Allah'" - p 115) as "socialistic": "Yet I am at a loss to see where my perfidy lay ; for my outlook is sufficiently socialistic to cause me to regard with displeasure the conserving by an individual of something which, without loss to himself, might reasonably be shared by the community." (p 131)

In a later, non Abu Tabah tale, the subject of slavery in 20th century Cairo comes up:

""He has many slaves. His agent in Mecca procures for him the pick of the market."

""But there is no such thing as slavery in Egypt!"

""Do the slaves know that, effendim? he asked simply. "Those who have tongues are never seen outside the walls—unless they are guarded by those who have no tongue." - pp 246-247

Indeed. In how many places in this world does slavery still exist? & do the slaves themselves even get a chance to know that it's illegal?!

"That the queen under whom Egyptian art came to the apogee of perfection should thus have been treated by her successors ; that no perfect figure of the wise, famous, and beautiful Hatasu should have been spared to posterity ; that he very cartouche should have been ruthlessly removed from every inscription upon which it appeared" (p 267) is explained on Wikisource thusly: "All that we know is that she disappears from history in about her fortieth year, and that her brother and successor, the third Thothmes, actuated by a strong and settled animosity, caused her name to be erased, as far as possible, from all her monuments." - http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Ancient...

The mere fact that reading the above-quoted passage in "In the Valley of the Sorceress" prompted me to do even this tiny bit of research makes Tales of Secret Egypt good reading for me. Alas, in my copy of the bk, pp 268-269, 272-273, 276-277, & 280-281 are blank - making the mystery even more mysterious (altho filling in the blanks wasn't very hard).

"I once read a work by Pierre de l'Ancre, dealing with the Black Sabbaths of the Middle Ages" (p 275) "Pierre de Rosteguy de Lancre or Pierre de l'Ancre, Lord of De Lancre (1553–1631), was the French judge of Bordeaux who conducted a massive witch-hunt in Labourd in 1609. In 1582 he was named judge in Bordeaux, and in 1608 King Henry IV of France commanded him to put an end to the practice of witchcraft in Labourd, in the French part of the Basque Country, where over four months he sentenced to death several dozen persons." ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_... ) More research I wdn't've done w/o Rohmer's arousing my curiosity.

I even found the final tale, "Pomegranate Flower", worthy of Boccaccio's The Decameron or of the Tales from the Thousand and One Nights. Whether this latter is really a compliment or not might depend on whether one ignores that these tales run on for hundreds of pages w/ dreary fundamentalist war propaganda.

I'd like to read a bk like this written by an Arab writer about New York City or some such. It wd help me get a clearer perspective on the ways in wch Rohmer (& others) romanticize & distort cultures that he's not a part of in order to make entertaining & exoticizing fiction.

By the by, I don't know whether this is available as a hard-copy bk anymore but it IS available online here: http://archive.org/stream/talesofsecr...
Profile Image for Stuart Dean.
780 reviews7 followers
December 23, 2019
Twelve tales set in Egypt circa 1919. The first six involve the exploits of Neville Kernaby, a British citizen working for an import company whose business is perfectly legitimate and not at all smuggling artifacts out of Egypt. Kernaby's job causes him to be in some interesting situations with interesting people, and the most interesting is Abu Tabah. The mysterious Abu has great power in the government, appears everywhere at once, and is related to some of the most influential people on the Nile.

The other six are random stories set in Egypt. They usually involve a beautiful Muslim girl in trouble and a gullible young man. These are very good, with "Harun Pasha" being particularly good, and "Pomegranate Flower" is just hilarious.

Sax Rohmer(Peace be Upon Him) writes like no one else. His mastery of language is amazing, and all of these stories exhibit his skill at mimicking the local mannerisms of the Muslims under British rule. Best ever.
Profile Image for Derek.
1,387 reviews8 followers
October 19, 2016
It's difficult to separate the attitude of the author from those of his narrators. Is the casually racist statements--particularly those toward sub-Saharan Africans--a reflection on Rohmer, on the narrator, or on the expectations of the audience? A curiosity is the relationship of his (European) narrator Kernaby, a shameless and entertaining rogue, and the clever and, increasingly shown, upstanding Abu Tabah. All the stories trended to compromised European narration: jaded, villainous, or credulous and star-struck.

At the very least, Rohmer is a strong, steady hand for intricate and adventurous plotting, and for the verisimilitude of his Cairo and the people who live there.

Profile Image for Italo Italophiles.
528 reviews40 followers
July 18, 2018
This book should be removed from GoodReads. It is full of racism, but the clincher is the white male argument for tourism pedophilia in one of the stories from circa 1900.
Profile Image for Matt Kelland.
Author 4 books9 followers
July 21, 2015
Cracking stories! Rohmer clearly loves drawing on Arabic settings and tales, and they're filled with excitement and adventure. If you're only familiar with his Fu Manchu series, then give these a try.
Profile Image for Susan Molloy.
Author 152 books88 followers
November 13, 2023
I very much enjoyed these short stories, which are a very delightful collection of mysteries, adventures, and exotic people in turn-of-the-century Egypt. This book was first published in 1919 and written by the creator of Dr. Fu Manchu, Sax Rohmer.
Profile Image for Mike Mikos.
43 reviews4 followers
January 5, 2012
Early effort by Sax Rohmer, One of my favorite authors. Short story collection set in Egypt during early British Colonialism. Not up to his later efforts.
Profile Image for Neil.
503 reviews6 followers
November 8, 2015
Sax Rohmer's stories are usually fun over the top slightly racist pieces, here all too often he takes things seriously. The best of the bunch is In The Valley Of The Sorceress.
Profile Image for Will.
191 reviews1 follower
July 23, 2014
This book of short stories was fun, but important, or infamous, for another reason. It is the first book I read entirely on my phone. Sigh.
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