Million-copy best-selling creator of the Incredible Cross-Sections series now brings his talent to a new ancient Egypt.
The year is 1230 B.C., during the reign of Ramses the Great in ancient Egypt. Follow the thirty-day voyage of the eleven-year-old Dedia and his father as they sail down the Nile River.
Travel along with father and son as they visit the bustling harbor at Elephantine; the massive stone quarry at Gebel el-Silsila; the temples at Karnak; underground tombs in The Valley of the Kings; a funeral and mummification; the step pyramid at Saqqara; and Ramses' lavish palace at Piramesse. Quite a journey!
Stewart Ross has written more than 300 titles, fiction and non-fiction, for children and adults. Many are about (or inspired by) history. He lives near Canterbury, England.
I have quite a few books on Ancient Egypt. This is my favourite.
You don’t need to know anything to read it and understand. You could know all the theory and I believe you’d still flick through the large pages, studying each picture following the interactions of the characters with a sense of wonder. It doesn’t matter if you’re five, or 105, this is a book accessible and enticing for all.
I love these books, there's just a lot for a reader (they're geared toward kids, 9 to 12) to enjoy. The Egypt book is especially fun with anthropological and archeological facts interspersed in a simple story. There's some humour, and the very detailed illustrations show many facets of everyday life, including injury and death. The copy I read was a library book with a 2004 copywrite.
Yes, it's a kids book. But it kinda just jumped out of the 'recently returned' shelf at the library when I was returning something myself and it started waving at me. Personally, I blame Daniel Jackson! LOL. But no, there was something about the picture on the cover that caught my eye, and really other than a little bit about the mythology, I don't know anything abou Ancient Egypt. Kids books can often be a really good, basic, introduction to a topic - puts things in simple language and gives just enough information to trigger whether or not you're interested, without you having to put too much effort in. Maybe that's just my way of seeing it.
But I'm actually really enjoyed it. The detail in the artwork in incredible, there's so much to look at that I didn't know where to start. I found there's just enough information to whet my appetite and make me want to know more, but it's not overwhelming or distracting from the pictures. It's covers the Nile, a harbour, a temple, a quarry, a merchant's house, a funeral (and mummification), pyramids, farming and a palace. I loved that so many different aspects of day-to-day life are featured.
This book is all about Egyptian culture. It tells about every aspect of life back in Egyptian time, from mummification to a day in the life of royalty. I have been fascinated with Egyptian culture since I was little and was absolutely enthralled with this book. Everything I could ever want to know is in this book! I would use this book when teaching about ancient Egypt and possibly archaeology.
This really is a pretty great book. Wonderful detail. An engaging story. Really neat illustration. Very good for raising a child's interest in the mysteries of Egypt.