Who knew Marie Benedict shared my fascination with Hatshepsut, one of the few female pharaohs of Ancient Egypt? Well, now everyone does, with her latest novel Daughter of Egypt (#1,368). In addition, she introduces us to Lady Evelyn Herbert, daughter of Lord Carnarvon, in her capacity as an active participant in the excavation of Tutankhamen's tomb beside Howard Carter and her father. Lady Evelyn is portrayed here as a Hatshepsut enthusiast as well.
The novel alternates between Lady Evelyn's determination to go to Egypt on an archaeological dig along with her father and the story of Hatshepsut herself as she grows into the role of Pharaoh. Both are strong women with ideas of their own which don't necessarily reflect the conventions of their times. Somehow each of them find a way to make things happen to suit their individual visions.
While I was already familiar with most of Hatshepsut's story, Ms. Benedict does posit an interesting theory on why her name and image were obliterated from buildings and temples after her death. I had a real sense of awe gazing at her mummified remains at the new Cairo Museum of Egyptian Civilization where she and other pharaonic mummies were reverently placed with great ceremony by the Egyptian government several years ago. Her funerary temple near the Valley of the Kings is every bit as magnificent as portrayed in Daughter of Egypt.
But the real revelation in this book is the role Lady Evelyn Herbert actually played in Egyptian archaeology. Although I've read quite a bit about the excavations carried out there (Thank you novelist Elizabeth Peters and your marvelous Crocodile on the Sandbank series, who in real life was Barbara Mertz, eminent Egyptologist!) and even sailed on a Viking ship in Egypt plastered with photos and mementoes of Lord Carnarvon, patron of the Egyptian dig which uncovered King Tut, never once have I heard a whisper about Lady Evelyn and her role in the proceedings. I certainly didn't know that she was the first one to enter the newly discovered tomb in 1922!
Fascinating!