Spring 2024

Exploring Egyptian Mythology

From the Set Current Topics by ReferencePoint Press

The ancient Egyptians had a large, rich collection of myths that developed over the course of more than four thousand years. This book examines the colorful gods and goddesses, the primary creation myths, and several mythical monsters and the human heroes who slew them. Also included is the mystical tale the Egyptians saw as their most important: the Myth of Kingship, which established that all people, regardless of wealth and status, could find salvation in the afterlife.

Format List Price Your Price Qty
$45.26 $33.95
Interest Level Grade 6 - Grade 12
Reading Level Grade 6
Dewey Number 299
Lexile
ATOS Reading Level
Guided Reading Level
Language English
Publisher ReferencePoint Press
Format Reinforced book
ISBN 9781678207281
Copyright 2024
Number of Pages 64
Dimensions 6.5 x 9.25
Graphics Full-color photographs

Kirkus Review of Exploring Egyptian Mythology

A fresh edition of the author’s ever-useful overview of Egyptian myth and legend, rearranged and featuring some new content. From the “dynamic duo” of Khnum and Amun-Ra to the giant snake Apep and the “dual-gendered fertility god” Hapi, crowds of deities and “creepy monsters” parade through Nardo’s analytical summaries. His insistence in the rewritten introduction and elsewhere that the ancient Egyptians saw the gods and their deeds as historical seems at odds with mentions elsewhere of “symbolic” representations in art and conflicting variations in local creation myths and pantheons. Still, readers able to weather his short discourses on cosmogonies and zoo morphs will enjoy the relish with which he recounts, for instance, how evil Seth chopped brother Osiris into “bloody morsels,” the awful vengeance cow-headed Hathor wrought on the “mere humans” who “disrespected” her father Ra, and how she rescued blinded Horus after Seth was able to “get the drop on him.” The image chosen to portray the tale of Seth and Osiris unfortunately features Seth as a brutish, black-skinned man and evokes racist caricatures; other images show ancient artifacts and sites. In this edition, a chapter on Egyptian myths in modern culture has been switched out for one that’s less likely to go stale, thrillingly titled “Serpents, Soul Eaters, and Other Monsters,” and the resource lists at the end have been updated as well.

Serviceable both for introducing the topic and for replacing a lost or worn copy of an earlier version. (source notes, further research, index, picture credits) (Nonfiction. 12-16)

Author: Don Nardo