There aren't many books specifically about the Old Kingdom, and discussions of Egyptian daily life in particular focus on the much more abundant evidence from the New Kingdom. But there's more evidence about Old Kingdom life than is commonly recognized. Forman's spectacular photographs include all the iconic monuments and artifacts from the period, but he seeks out lesser-known works of art that illustrate episodes of daily life, including not just the more common scenes of hunting, fishing, and herding but scenes of children at play, metalworkers forging jewelry, and workers dragging statues on sledges. Málek's text begins with the emergence of the Egyptian state in the Early Dynastic Period and ends with the collapse of the Old Kingdom, but most of it is a non-chronological discussion of economy, state, religion, and art.
To anyone familiar with the more sophisticated society of the New Kingdom, the differences are readily apparent. Old Kingdom Egypt had a population of maybe a million, and the only major population center was the region of Memphis, but the Egyptian state vastly outmatched the less populous and less organized peoples to the west and south. There was no standing army, internal trade seems to have been very limited, and there was no wheeled transportation. The vast majority of people lived at a subsistence level—even more so than in the Bronze or Iron Ages—and all wealth and power was connected with the state. The impression one gets is that the great Fourth Dynasty pyramids were made possible because the state so thoroughly dominated what little organized activity took place in their time. If the king decided to divert all that activity toward one immense monument, immense that monument would be—a kind of summation of all the ability in Egypt.