"You're my only witness, Miss Payne. Everyone else is dead. But you were there. Those crucial three days when the tomb was found, when Carter breached the wall into its antechamber, looked through and saw his "wonderful things"…You were close by. You knew the people involved. You witnessed the events after that, you watched the story unfold. To me, your memories are like a treasure house."
- An interview with Lucy Payne in Sally Beauman's "The Visitors"
Sally Beauman delivers an amazing piece of historical fiction, in which she evokes a world of English colonialism with characters who have real depth and a vibrant pulse. Beauman finds a poignant balance of voice among her mostly youthful leads, intermingled with their English and American upper class parents, and some real-world stars of post World War I society.
The fulcrum on which the story is balanced, is the 1922 discovery of King Tutanhkhaum's tomb in the Valley of the Kings. A fictional Lucy Payne is recovering from typhoid that has taken her mother, and is introduced to non-fictional players that surrounded Lord Carnarvon and Howard Carter in the year leading up to his magnificent discovery. Lucy narrates her tale that bounces between her 11th and 12th years in Egypt and England and the present day where she's interviewed for a documentary on King Tut and Carter's discoveries.
"Too much past. So many lost people."
- Lucy, from "The Visitors"
Death Surrounds and permeates the story like a dank countryside mist: Egyptian mummies, Lucy's mother, Frances' brother, a family friend, and even more as the story progresses. The theme is at moments dark, but there's always a sense of renewal, of hope. At times haunting, "The Vistitors" thematically skips between ruminations on death, history, and the eye-awakening growth from childhood to adolescence and the leap into adulthood.
Beauman's prose is often poetic; equally strong in its ability to describe an Egyptian sunset over the Nile, as it is in it's sparing and affecting dialogue. Lucy considers her past, one marred with intense relationships and profound sadness, "I could feel ghosts gathering. They're now as familiar with my house as I am. They like to cluster, especially by the stairs. Today their mood seemed amicable; it is not always so."
"I never escape. I never shake the Valley off, it's always in my mind."
- Howard Carter comments during an offseason spent in the English countryside.
Howard Carter isn't quite a primary character, but his aura pervades the story, he's a constant influence. He's portrayed as visionary and temperamental. He's obsessed with his discovery and driven with his need to complete his quest. Another character puts a finer point on how Carter's perceived. "Maybe Carter's a genius with an ace up his sleeve. Maybe he's a misguided dreamer - and a fool."
While the story focuses on Lucy's journey through these key moments in her life, we get a glimpse of Carter's journey, viewed through the eyes of a twelve year old. And through her unique lens, we see a changing world as well. Discovery and science are moving past the 'gentleman explorer'. "The day of the amateur excavator is over...Welcome to the brave new world of the trained professional. Welcome to the universities and museums, to scientific exaction, performed by men bristling with doctorates," one character states. Egypt's fight for independence from British rule runs through the background, all too reminiscent of our own modern Arab spring.
Lucy's world is one that orbits an upper crust English society headed by Lord Carnarvon and filled out by an upper middle class that seems vaguely aware of the societal revolutions around them. There's a definitive "Downton Abby" vibe, as Beauman captures English Colonial era dialogue among the upper class gentry. Lord Carnarvon's real-life castle is, in fact, the location of Downton Abby itself.
Beauman strikes a perfect tone in establishing the relationships and emotions which make up the driving threads of the plot lines: Lucy and her friends Frances, Rose and Pete, her step-mother Nicola, and her nanny Miss Mack. Beauman also balances the thrill and tensions of the discovery itself, with the self-discovery we witness within Lucy.
There's a smidgen of romance, but the true romance of the story resides in its very unique timeframe and locations. The discovery of King Tut makes for a very particular place in history, and Beauman deftly encapsulates what it might have been like to live in that era. On the backbone of the fun and excitement of the Tut discovery, Beauman has built a fully developed set of characters.
With it's combination of discovery, exploration, and lifelike emotional characters, I couldn't recommend this book more strongly.
I received this book as part of the Amazon Vine program.