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Hardcover Year of the Hyenas: A Novel of Murder in Ancient Egypt Book

ISBN: 074325080X

ISBN13: 9780743250801

Year of the Hyenas: A Novel of Murder in Ancient Egypt

(Book #1 in the Semerket Series)

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

Year of the Hyenas is a brilliant, original, and unique murder mystery, set in ancient Egypt at the height of that kingdom's glory and power. It is at once a strikingly insightful portrait of a... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

An excellent historical fiction read!

Historical mysteries generally find a soft spot in my reading-they are great diversions. The Egyptian historical mystery genre already has at least three excellent authors with their own excellent series and now Brad Geagley had debuted with what promises to be another exciting series of the Old World. In "Year of the Hyenas" Geagley presents Semerket, an anti-hero before his time,which happens to be 1153 BC! He's an investigator all right, but an unlikely one. A boozer, Semeket has some good credentials in the investigating business, but drink and women have taken their toll and "down and out" probably best describes him. Still, he's a character that we have no trouble respecting, once the story gets going. It's a murder investigation. A priestess has been found dead and with all the political, religious, social, and economic issues involved, actually the authorities really aren't interested in having the facts uncovered, much less an actual conviction. But "conviction" is what Semerket is about and, naturally, as the story unfolds, we find the usual stumbling blocks and obstacles, all of which Semerket is eventually able to negotiate. Geagley avoids being "too factual" and presents a fast moving-and actually delightful-read.

Worth it as a mystery as well as for the history....

I stumbled on this book, and now can hardly wait till a sequel comes out. The protaganist isn't very likable at first, then you realize that he really is an honest man...and not perfect. The descriptions of the time and place in Egypt were woven into the story, occasionally an author throws more historical information at you and you find yourself distracted from the plot. Geagley weaves a tale and the context without doing the "look at me, look at how much research I've done" interferance. I particularly liked how he ends the tail, I saw parts of it coming, but not the whole surprise. Really worth your time if you like mysteries--and historical settings.

Pharaonic Noir!

Geagley injects the tropes of the hard-boiled detective story into the milieu of the civilization of ancient Egypt - and pulls it off! God-haunted Thebes during the reign of Ramses III is a profoundly alien place to the modern mind, but human nature doesn't change, and the theme of a lone man wedded to truth pitted against pervasive and powerful corruption held my interest all the way through, in spite of (or maybe because of) the unfamiliar setting. It was even better that the lone man was a deeply flawed human being wrestling with his own problems while trying to solve an ever-widening mystery - and survive multiple attempts on his life. Geagley's prose is lean and forceful, his characters are memorable, and his rendering of ancient Egypt is colorful and convincing. Highly recommended. I look forward eagerly to the next installment in the series.

Mirror of the "antique psyche"

From my long-time reading of the period murder mystery genre, I've found it easy to find "cozies" which are fun to read, but provide little depth to their treatment of their periods. This book is the exception to that rule, and gives us a work which is at once character- as well as plot-driven, faithful to the period, and generous with an accuracy of history. It was a struggle for me to make the book last more than a couple of days, so engaging is the plot. Among all those facets commending the work, the most important for me was what I can only feel is an authenticity of the psyche of the protagonist and supporting characters. The author's forgoing of psychological anacronism in his character development gives this work a depth and substance not often found in the mystery genre at all. I eagerly await future volumes in this series, and recommend it without reservation.

terrific Ancient Egypt police procedural

In 1153 BC Thebes, the Clerk of Investigations and Secrets Semerket is delegated with finding out who killed the popular much-loved Priestess Hetephras. Unbeknownst to Semerket is that his superiors selected him because they assume that the alcoholic acrimonious loser will fail. Then they can fire him for incompetence, but not before they blame him to the masses who demand the killer face vigilante justice; the pathetic Semerket would make a fine substitute as far as his bosses are concerned. However, shockingly Semerket digs deep and soon uncovers tomb robbers that he begins to believe may be connected to his murder investigation. As he uncovers more clues, he begins to realize that this simple murder of a cherished figure and related robberies are just the surface covering up a conspiracy that he believes places the Pharaoh in peril. As Semerket drinks to ease his fears of what to do without losing his head, his decision making process is stolen from him when his beloved becomes a target. YEAR OF THE HYENAS is a terrific Ancient Egypt police procedural starring an interesting protagonist; readers will agree with Semerket's superiors that he is the last person they figure capable of solving anything. Semerket is an unpleasant grouch who makes a perfect foible for the conspirators except that no one realized how he would go the extra tomb or two to solve the case. Although the prose reads at times deliberately archaic giving the investigation an ancient feel that is difficult to follow, fans will enjoy Brad Geagley's fine historical who-done-it. Harriet Klausner
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