Despite the superlative subtitle, Joyce Tyldesley's Pyramids: The Real Story Behind Egypt's Most Ancient Monuments is a frank and authoritative tome on the most iconic image of Ancient Egypt throughout the centuries – the pyramids.
As usual with Tyldesley's books, her writing is both accessible and authoritative. I have no trouble recommending any of Tyldesley's books to readers new to Egyptology. Not only are her information good and her arguments sound, but her writing style is clear and the content well-explained.
Tyldesley claims to have attempted write about the pyramids and how they spawned from culture of the Egyptian Old Kingdom, rather than the question of 'how were they built'. I'm not quite sure she's entirely successful here – but only because there is limited information available. Certainly, this book is a good example of an "all-rounder" – we have information on the kings these tombs were built for and their rule, the workmen that built the pyramids, why they were built and, very briefly, how. Tyldesley also goes beyond the notion of pyramids as kingly tombs and spends a chapter tracing the motive of the pyramid in non-royal tombs. Scattered throughout the text as well are insights to how these monuments and their builders have been viewed throughout history.
If you are looking for a book on how they were built or the crazy conspiracies behind these structures, you best look elsewhere. Tyldesley does give a couple of recommendations for the first, but stubbornly ignores the latter, unless to quickly debunk a particular theory.
I found the first section – on predynastic times, providing the context for the emergence for the pyramid – a bit of a hard slog. Perhaps it's because I'm already fairly familiar with that time or because that time period is not particularly interesting with the evidence incredibly fragmentary and bewildering. This is the reason why the rating is four stars, not five. However, once I hit the chapters on Djoser, Sneferu and Khufu, I was able to enjoy the book a hell of a lot more.
All up, it's another typical Tyldesley read – reliable, easy to digest and authoritative – on a subject that's fascinating. With so much obfuscating information and theories on the pyramids of Egypt, it is always nice to have a book about them by an author like Tyldesley.