From Publishers Weekly
The destruction of a noble ancient Egyptian family, precipitated by violation of an ancient taboo, is traced with vibrant detail in this novel (published abroad as Scroll of Saqqara ) from the author of Child of the Morning . Khaemwaset, a son of the Pharaoh, is a physician-scholar and head of a leading Memphis clan. Pursuing his quest for enlightenment, he enters a tomb and steals the scroll of Thoth, believed to have the "power to bend the dead and living to its will," thereby setting in motion the disaster that will overtake his family. Returning from the tomb, Khaemwaset catches sight of a beautiful woman, Tbubui, with whom he becomes obsessed, eventually bringing her into his household as his second wife. Among the mysteries surrounding Tbubui is a pervasive, slightly fetid perfume which does not affect Khaemwaset's lust. His passion continues unabated even when he must accept the grisly evidence that the odor is that of the charnel house. Gedge vividly renders the exotic, sensuous world of ancient Memphis, the domestic rituals of bathing and dressing, the social ambience of superstitions and spells. These details generally compensate for labored dialogue and the jarring use of contemporary expressions.
Copyright 1990 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Product Description
A tale of magic, power and unnatural lust set in Ancient Egypt. Prince Khwaemwaset seeks the mysterious Scroll of Thoth, which will give its possessor the power to raise the dead and thus attain immortality, but he encounters dark forces which he should never have awakened.