
A History of Egypt from Earliest Times to the Present
Kyle Pakka
Jason Thompson
2008, American University in Cairo Press, 978-977- 416-091-2, $34.95 hb; 2009, Anchor, 978-0-30747352-3, $17 pb.
Confronted by millennia of history, historians of Egypt have often focused on distinct eras—Pharaonic, Greco-Roman, Ottoman or modern, for example—rather than write of a cohesive whole. This dearth of comprehensive histories is answered handsomely by Thompson’s survey of Egyptian history from pre-dynastic times to the contemporary nation-state. The editor of two previous collections of observations on Egyptian culture by 19th-century British orientalist Edward Lane, Thompson traces both the elements of continuity that span Egyptian history and the ways that the perceptions of western scholars have shaped the prevailing image of the country. Primarily a political history with some attention to society, culture and religion, Thompson’s straightforward account of the twists and turns of history and the people, famous and infamous, who have played a part in the story of Egypt will appeal to general readers and travelers seeking a historical background to all the marvels found in the land of the Nile, from pyramids to traffic jams, as well as to current events there.
You may also be interested in...
Drawing New Conclusions About the Status of Women in Ancient Egypt
Egyptologist Mariam F. Ayad that gender bias among historians accounts for an underrepresentation of women’s lives in historical studies of Egypt.Family Trek Across Lebanon Inspires 70 Years Later
Tag along with a Beirut-based British family on a 483-kilometer trek along Lebanon’s mountainous backbone in an updated release first published in 1959.Book Deconstructs Myth Surrounding Egypt’s Most-Famous Boy King
Egyptologist Aidan Dodson sifts the evidence—from tomb paintings to statuary to temple inscriptions—in his quest to recover the real King Tutankhamun.