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What Life Was Like

What Life Was Like on the Banks of the Nile: Egypt, 3050-30 BC

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The dazzling ancient Egyptian civilization, which was born by the river Nile and flourished for more than 3,000 years, captures our imagination as no other culture before or since. Their magnificent pyramids, colossal temples, and brooding Sphinx never fail to awe and astound us. But even more amazing are other artifacts, ones that the Egyptians never meant for us to see - rolls of papyrus, pottery chips, and tombs - that tell us about the people who built the grand structures that grace the Egyptian landscape.

192 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1997

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Denise Dersin

16 books4 followers

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5 stars
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89 (40%)
3 stars
48 (22%)
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Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews
Profile Image for GoldGato.
1,304 reviews38 followers
December 31, 2014
Sometimes, a book surprises me. By that, I simply mean that I don't expect much but get amply rewarded. This is a well put together collection of art, photos, stories, facts, and history, all of which focus not just on the ancient Egyptian rulers, but on the subjects themselves.

We can never know if the Egyptians reached the afterworld they dreamed of. But we can follow the people of the Nile on their earthly journeys and learn what their life was like.

Perfect summation of what this book holds. As I was reading this, I found myself far more absorbed in the ordinary details of the merchants and scribes and tomb-builders than I ever thought I would. This is due to easy text and well-placed illustrations to support the words.

For instance, the world of the workers who had to live away from the Nile sounds very similar to the world of the worker in a modern Silicon Valley campus. The Egyptian rulers wanted their workers to be productive, so laundry service was provided, fresh water was delivered daily, meals were made on-site, and housing was built. By doing this, the Pharaohs ensured their statues and monuments would be created by a productive and, relatively, happy group of workers.

"With a beaming face celebrate the joyful day and rest not therein. For no one can take away his goods with him. Yea, no one returns again, who has gone hence."

This is a very good read for a decent overview of basic life in ancient Egypt, and I recommend it as an accompaniment to Chronicles Of The Pharaohs . This way, the reader can get both the upper and lower class side of the Egyptians. I finished this book with a greater understanding of why the Pharaohs and their empire lasted far longer than any other ancient civilization.

Book Season = Summer (cool palm oasis)
Profile Image for Joan.
2,907 reviews56 followers
November 13, 2019
This account of the lives of the people of ancient Egyptians explores the civilization that endured for some three thousand years, build the massive pyramids, the Sphinx, and colossal temples. An extensive timeline, maps, drawings, and illustrations accompany the comprehensive text.

A glossary of terms, a pronunciation guide, and an extensive bibliography follow the text. Readers with an interest in the
culture of ancient Egypt will find much to appreciate here.

Recommended.
Profile Image for Michele.
Author 9 books25 followers
March 22, 2015
If you have an interest in Egyptology and are just starting to delve into the subject, then this book will provide a reasonable introduction. The Time Life editors commence with a brief narrative on Egyptian history describing major pharaohs and events. The introduction is accompanied by an illustrated timeline outlining the dynasties.

Each chapter addresses a theme of what was like in ancient Egypt and the editors include stories of real life individuals pieced together from surviving documentation. Also, there are mini essays, which spotlight and give additional insight to the overarching chapter theme. The book has a generous amount of photographs, a glossary of terms, a bibliography and the all-important index (thank you editors!).

Since I am fact finding for a story I am developing, this book has given me the big picture of ancient Egypt. It has also provided me with leads I can use for further, more directed research. However, for current historical views and discoveries in the 21st century (this book was written in the mid 1990s), then this book is dated. That said I do still feel it’s a good read for starting out.
Profile Image for Bob.
158 reviews8 followers
September 23, 2007
I bought this whole series long ago to help my daughter with an ancient history class. Of course that was my excuse. However, I have always been intrigued by the lives of everyday people in other times and places. Like all time life books, the pictures are beautiful.
Profile Image for Julian Abagond.
123 reviews4 followers
August 29, 2018
This is a Time-Life book, which means it has wonderful pictures and terrible narrative flow. The book is based on the lives of middle and upper class Egyptians that have been preserved in court records, like a fly in amber, with dates, names, places, everything.
Profile Image for Foxfire0002.
2 reviews
October 16, 2018
Great pictures. Unengaging read. Couldn’t finish it.

This would be a amazing book if it weren’t for the poorly written narrative of the story. It is a bore to read. And I wish I liked it more. Two stars for great pictures.
Profile Image for Michael Duckworth.
15 reviews
June 20, 2018
History. A footprint of the mankind written in 200 pages, well described and explained every event that happened in the past.
207 reviews14 followers
October 15, 2024
Long years ago, this was my introduction to ancient Egypt as it really was, as opposed to the fictional portrayals I had encountered before. Because it's so firmly grounded in the realities of everyday life, as documented in Egyptian texts themselves, it still largely holds up today. Given how long ago Egypt's heyday was, it's sometimes startling to think that we know as much about it as we do, thanks to such chance survivals as the Heqanakht papyri (mundane family business), the autobiography of Ahmose son of Ebana (the military campaigns that forged the New Kingdom), and the wealth of evidence from Deir el-Medina (just about everything that can happen in a Bronze Age village). The book's prose fleshes out these documents vividly yet without too much embellishment. It sometimes even sounds notes of skepticism. It points out, for example, that some of Amennakht's laundry list of complaints against his adoptive brother Paneb may be invented, but it treats Amennakht's general portrayal of Paneb's character as accurate—because there are abusive jackasses like Paneb in every age. The text and illustrations convey ancient Egypt in all its beauty and grit (literal grit, in the bread, wearing down your teeth).

Because it's so focused on everyday life, subjects such as literature and religion are rather thinly covered, with some quotations of poetry and a summary of the story of Sinuhe being the sole instances of the former, and the latter mostly represented by funerary customs. But we do get a brief description of funerary texts and a taste of the surreal afterlife found in them. ("'You shall not tread upon me,' declares a menacing floor" is one of my favorite sentences ever.)

No Time-Life book is going to be everything you need to know about a subject, but for ancient Egypt, this one is a good place to start.
Profile Image for Tamara Agha-Jaffar.
Author 6 books283 followers
August 27, 2024
What Life Was Like on the Banks of the Nile: Egypt, 3050-30 BC, edited by Denise Dersin and Time Life Books, offers a comprehensive and intimate portrayal of the daily life of a number of Egyptians from different walks of life. The volume is richly illustrated with paintings, artifacts, reliefs, maps, and diagrams of buildings. It provides a valuable glimpse into Egyptian life, belief systems, culture, and history.

Highly recommended for those interested in the history and culture of Ancient Egypt.

My book reviews are also available at www.tamaraaghajaffar.com
Profile Image for Gary.
146 reviews12 followers
July 30, 2024
I suppose one could call this a coffee-table book because of its large format and because it has as many inches allotted to photos and diagrams as to text. I would dispute the coffee-table characterization in that first, graphics are an essential portal to understanding something of ancient Egypt, and second, what makes this book distinctive is its focus on individual Egyptians. From the wealth of surviving documents such as letters and legal documents, and tomb paintings and carvings, we can come to understand something of the lives of individual men and women who are not high-born. This is not a political, archeological, social, or military history; it is about individual Egyptians and the context in which they lived.

Over the years I've read a good many books on ancient Egypt and have visited Egypt; this slim book, coffee-table or not, is a window into another time and place as lived by real people. I enjoyed it tremendously.
Profile Image for Simon.
255 reviews6 followers
September 21, 2020
The theme of this beautifully produced Time-Life book, as you would expect from its title, is what life was like in ancient Egypt. Although there is a brief time-line at the beginning to set the scene historically, the book takes a general look at ancient Egyptian customs and practices. It does this in four broad sections dealing with daily life, the pharaoh, warfare, and death, brilliantly telling the stories of real individuals from the hieroglyphic texts they have left, and illustrating these with images of artefacts, monuments and art. This is a sumptuous and informative introduction to a fascinating subject.
Profile Image for Nancy H.
3,131 reviews
December 3, 2022
This is an excellent series. It gives background history of ancient peoples, and is well-researched and well-written. In this volume, life in ancient Egypt is examined and all aspects of early Egyptians' lives are explored and explained. It is fascinating reading and I am planning to read the whole series.
Profile Image for Conner.
16 reviews
January 3, 2019
This book does what the title implies, and it does it well. It is very interesting in what the Egyptions did all those years ago. It goes in-depth through those 3000 years on the Nile. It is a great book for those interested in Egyption life.
Profile Image for Bradytom3.
18 reviews
June 20, 2018
One history that talk about the years in the past in Egypt history amazing
Profile Image for Julie Brook.
91 reviews
February 14, 2024
Very interesting book with lots of great pictures of actual items. Stories of past people from recovered items also a look into the past
Profile Image for Susan.
1,321 reviews
August 17, 2014
So women weren't often pharaohs, and apparently weren't priests or soldiers, but could pretty much do anything else, own property, and marry and divorce freely. I didn't know that ancient Egypt was so egalitarian.
Profile Image for Fernando Pereira.
171 reviews1 follower
January 20, 2015
Muito mais do que uma história sobre faraós, este livro retrata toda a sociedade egípcia: as suas diferentes classes, como viviam, o tipo de educação que tinham, a forma como a sociedade estava organizada administrativamente, as suas crenças religiosas, etc.
As fotografias são espectaculares.
Profile Image for Anne.
17 reviews
November 11, 2008
Great combination of illustrations, factoids, and stories about specific people of the time (backed up by their letters, tomb documents, etc.).
Profile Image for Rose.
2,055 reviews4 followers
March 15, 2016
Excellent photographs. Good overview of the period; it filled in some gaps in my knowledge base, especially with its visual time lines.
Displaying 1 - 23 of 23 reviews

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