The Valley Iris – a story of social life in ancient pharaonic Egypt
This is the first book of the “A Lost Pharaoh Chronicles Prequel” series by Lauren Lee Merewether. She published four books in the series so far and perhaps a few more and planned.
The story backdrop is during the reign of powerful New Kingdom 18th Dynasty Pharaoh Amenhotep-III (1390-1352 BC). If you are hoping for an exciting fast running palace conspiracy of Pharaonic time, this book is not about that. 18th Dynasty ruled from present day Luxor (known as Thebes during Greeko-Roman time and actual name was Waset during Pharaonic time). The king’s palace and his subjects used to live on the eastern side of the Nile river which passes through Waset. When someone dies, they will prepare the mummy, cross the river with the sarcophagus and burry it on the western side of Nile, which for them was the Valley of Dead. Today tourists go there to see the Valley of Kings, Valley of Queens and Tomb of Nobles, etc. In those time on the western side there was a protected settlement called “Deir el-Medina” where the tomb makers used to live, who used to prepare the tombs in the hills for the burials of Pahaohs and their families. As the tombs used to contain in addition to the dead a lot of gold and other wealth’s for their afterlife, these tomb diggers used get house, ration from the Pharaoh’s but they were a protected community cut-off from the living world and guarded by the Guards of the Necropolis.
Lauren’s characters lived in one such community, which she calls “Set Maat”. She describes the life of the people of this community, how young girls and boys used to find life partners and how marital infidelity used to be dealt by society and these centers around her young girls’ character Tey. One days this Tey jumps the walls of Set Maat under violent circumstances, crosses the Nile go to the land of the living, struggles to set herself and be one of them as she can never return to Set Maat.
If you plan to read this whole series and then plan to read her next four book series “The Lost Pharaoh Chronicles”, then this is your book. But if you are a casual reader who likes mysteries of ancient tombs or looking for palace conspiracies this is not for you. I enjoyed the book as I read everything on Pharaonic Egypt, and Lauren has kept the book smaller in size. She was able to capture the society of that time as far as we know today.