The 5,000-Year-Old Puzzle: Solving a Mystery of Ancient EgyptClaudia Logan
Gebundene Ausgabe
When King Tut's tomb was discovered in Egypt in 1922, the world was abuzz. What would be the next big, newsworthy archaeological find? Might it be Giza 7000 X, a secret Egyptian tomb buried deep within the earth? Claudia Logan and Melissa Sweet (with the cooperation of The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston) answer that question and ask a few more in < I> The 5, 000-Year-Old Puzzle, their truly splendid picture book for older readers. Readers follow a fictional family to Egypt in 1924 to an actual expedition led by Dr. George Reisner. Written in diary form from the perspective of young Will Hunt, who joins the expedition, the book is immediate and engaging, communicating the mystery and excitement of an archaeological dig like nothing we've seen. Illustrated with wonderful, color-soaked paintings as well as collages of authentic documents and artifacts from the Giza 7000 X site, this richly visual diary is as entertaining as it is educational. Young readers will revel in the "you are there" glimpse of an archaeological dig, learning that excavation can sometimes be as much about fleas and dust as it can be about mummies or, say, a solid gold lion's leg. Sidebars about pharoah's curses, cartouches, and heiroglyphs sit alongside enthusiastic postcards from the boy to his friends back home in Boston: " What are we doing? Picking up things hour after hour with T W E E Z E R S. If someone sneezes or trips-there goes 5, 000 years of history down the drain. " As Will lives behind the pyramids, he witnesses the discovery of a secret tomb. . . but whose is it? Can the team solve the mystery before Will and his parents return to America? Highly recommended. ( Ages 8 and older) < I>-Karin Snelson
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