![]() ![]() ![]() Offsetting the character of the physician, who is more or less of an idealist, easily duped by the woman he worships, failing to come to terms with other women who might have taken her place, is his slave, whom he frees, and who is wholly material and becomes vastly wealthy through his wits. The reader sees life going on, the details of custom, of dress, of beliefs, the social attitudes, the political chicanery, the double dealing. Through his eyes the panorama of ancient Egypt unfolds. The story covers several Pharoahs, during the long and useful life of Sinuhe, physician to royalty, lover of Egypt, observer rather than intimate participator of life. ![]() But it is not going to be a book that sells for itself the time sounds too remote (Egypt prior to and during the brief reign of Tutankhamon) the battle for supremacy between the followers of the god Aon, long worshipped in Egypt, and the now god of truth, Aton, who desires peace and plenty for all, is too pagan to be recognized as having its echoes, its parallels today. This is a fascinating recreation of a period - a people - a whole segment of the ancient world. ![]()
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