Tutankhamen
Speaks by
Cheryl Carpinello is my first book for Carpinello who writes middle grade (MG)
and young adult (YA) fiction. Carpinello says Tutankhamen
Speaks will be a companion book to her MG/YA Sons
of the Sphinx series. The way the story is written reminds me a bit of Mohamed
Salmawy’s Ten Egyptian Papyri, which were translated from Ancient Egyptian
to modern Arabic.
Tutankhamen Speaks is
written in the first person from young Tut’s point of view. Carpinello notes at
the beginning that she begins by using Tutankhaten and later Tutankhamen
depending on the deity at the different parts of his life. The same applies to
his half-sister Ankhesenpaaten, who later becomes Ankhesenpamun.
There are some interesting –
if not adorable – descriptions from the point of view of a child, like when Tutankhaten
sees an elephant for the first time. He says “The
animal ceased that horrible noise, turned around, and followed the man out the
door. That was when I saw the tail. What a funny addition to such a large
animal!
The tail was
puny, short, and sickly looking. If the head of this animal was too small for
the enormous body, then the tail was woefully out of place.”
In this short novella, there
is a subtle romance between Tutankhaten and his half-sister Ankhesenpaaten, which is evident from the beginning of the story. The reader
learns towards the end that marriages within the family are done to ensure the
royalty of the bloodline so there is no problem with Tut marrying his
half-sister.
There is also a quick – and subtle
- reference to the power struggle when Tutankhamen ascends the throne at age
12. He says “At twelve, while not the youngest ever
to rule Egypt, I was certainly one of the most inexperienced.”
Carpinello tells me that Sons
of the Sphinx does not pick up where Tutankhamen Speaks ends, but “incorporates
those ideas into its quest story.” Overall Tutankhamen Speaks is an
interesting and very quick read and I look forward to Sons of the Sphinx.
Cheryl Carpinello is also the
author of Wild Animals in My Neighborhood, Guinevere: On the Eve ofLegend and Young Knights of the Round Table: The King’s Ransom.
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