500 Book Reviews 80% Reviews Published Professional Reader

Saturday, June 29, 2024

A Guide to Egyptian Myths, by Sophie Washburne

 

Publication August 1, 2024

Love it! Wish I'd had this when I was still teaching. As a sometimes social studies teachers, I tried to include a unit on Egypt whenever possible, including a brief look at its myths and lore. This book would have been the perfect guide for that. Beautifully illustrated, with sharp, applicable photos, it tells the stories in an interesting, easy to follow manner, drawing you in. 

Basically divided into four sections/chapters, it provides an intro to the gods and goddesses of Egypt, the divine relationships and rivalries, their social order, and places in the natural world. I liked that there is no simple, boring listing of the deities but we get their stories, some of which are bizarre to our modern minds but fit the then cultural atmosphere. While showcasing each existing, known deity would be impossible in this relatively short book, we get the broad backstory. For instance, while noting the Egyptian importance of burying an intact body, which explains the facsimile parts often found in tombs, it shares the search of the goddess Isis for the mutilated parts of Osiris's body. In other words, we get the stories as well as an understanding of how they may have both stemmed from cultural beliefs.

Given that Egypt's culture is older than the Chinese, albeit frequently interrupted by warfare and invasion, not every deity is covered. Besides the basic pantheon many of us studied an school, there were multiple deities for scattered, local communities, not to mention different aspects of stories relating to the main players. Despite this, you'll away with not just a better understanding of who was who and how they were connected, but things like why even human name choices were impacted by beliefs. 

Bottom line, I could go on and on about what I liked. From the cover, which conveys a bit of the mystic of Egyptian mythology, to the multiple sharply focused photos used -- and we even get a shot of Tutankhumun's burial site as well as a brief mention of him -- to the select questions to guide study at the end of each section, everything is put together well. There's also a map. Egypt buffs, teachers, especially those whose curriculum touches on the area, and anyone with an interest in history, you'll thoroughly enjoy this book no matter your age. My thanks to #NetGalley and #RosenPublishingGroup - #CavendishSquare for this early indulgence of one of my favorite topics. Teachers, seriously, add this one to your libraries.

No comments:

Post a Comment

A Victim at Valentine's (A Secret Bookcase Mystery #5), by Ellie Alexander

  Publication Feb. 10, 2025 Annie Murray is one of those characters that stays with me when I read. That's actually surprising as, quite...