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The Ghost of Akhenaten
 
 
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The Ghost of Akhenaten [Paperback]

Moyra Caldecott
1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
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The Ghost of Akhenaten + Tutankhamun and the Daughter of Ra + Akhenaten: Son of the Sun (Egyptian Cycle)
Price For All Three: £26.97

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Product details

  • Paperback: 236 pages
  • Publisher: Bladud Books (24 Nov 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1843190249
  • ISBN-13: 978-1843190240
  • Product Dimensions: 20.4 x 12.9 x 1.5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 1.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 915,066 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

Who dares challenge the might of the Priests of Amun? A group of people are drawn inexorably together, and impelled by forces unknown to travel to Egypt to investigate what happened to the pharaoh Akhenaten who lived more than three thousand years before. Jack is fighting strange and powerful dreams. Finn is convinced he is a reincarnation of Akhenaten and has a personal interest in denying that the ghost exists. Emma believes she was Akhenaten's youngest daughter in a past life and longs to release her beloved father from the curse. Bernard, a medium, channels the voice of Akhenaten, pleading for help. Eliot won't have any of it and does everything in his power to cast doubt on their beliefs. Mary draws the threads together, describing her own compelling and mysterious encounters with Akhenaten. Their adventures are not what any of them expect, and have far-reaching consequences in their lives.

From the Author

From the Introduction:

The Pharaoh Akhenaten reigned in Egypt from c.1353-1335BC.

He was the son of the powerful Pharaoh Amenhotep III, and succeeded his father as Amenhotep IV. However, early in his reign he changed his name to Akhenaten, indicating that he revered the god Aten instead of Amun. Within a few years he had virtually dismantled the elaborate religious system of ancient Egypt, abolishing the worship of its many gods, demolishing their temples, and dispossessing their priesthoods. He declared the Aten, represented by the Sun’s Disk, the only true god, and himself and his wife, Nefertiti, the sole channels for its influence on earth.

No one knows how he died, but after his sudden death his successors declared his name anathema and everything he had put in place was destroyed. The temples of the other gods were rebuilt and the power of their priesthoods reinstated. His name was removed from the King Lists and it was as though he had never been. It is only in recent years that the persistent curiosity of archaeologists has uncovered his story. The city he built to the glory of his One God was excavated and an archive found that tells us much about his life.

There has been much speculation as to whether he was assassinated by the powerful priests of Amun who had suffered so much during his reign, and more than one source mentions a curse that doomed him to wander as a ghost for the rest of time as punishment for his heretical deeds.

While I was writing the novel Akhenaten: The Son of the Sun many strange and extraordinary experiences in dreams and through mediums led me to believe in this curse, and after the book was published I came upon someone who claimed to have personally encountered the ghost of Akhenaten in the Egyptian desert. A friend lent me Tombs, Temples and Ancient Art by Joseph and Corrina Lindon Smith, who describe a mysterious encounter they themselves had with the priests of Amun when they tried to set Akhenaten’s soul free from the curse in 1909. The archaeologist Arthur Weidgal who witnessed it also reported the incident.

In response to my novel about Akhenaten I received many letters from around the world claiming to be from reincarnations of Akhenaten or of members of his family. I also received reports of channelled messages from Akhenaten. It seems that whatever happened at his death, and in spite of all the efforts to wipe his name from history, Akhenaten is very much an active force in the world today. The books about him run into many hundreds – from cautious archaeology to wild speculation.

In this novel I hope to tread a path between the two extremes, never losing sight of the fact that there are many different realities.


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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
disappointing 12 Oct 2010
Format:Paperback
I was greatly looking forward to this story. But,having read it in a single day was most disappointed. The characters appear not to be very well 'fleshed out' there is very little narrative about ancient Egypt and, had I not known otherwise, I would have thought I was reading th abridged version. I found the character of Emma irritating in the extreme (a spoiled child and extremely stupid) who carries on like the silly women in horror films who hears a noise in a deserted forest, knows there's a maniac out there killing people and decides to go out on her own in a nightdress to see what it is, without telling anyone! Ridiculous. I won't be buying again any of this author's work. If you want stories about Egypt, go with Lauren Haney, Christian Jacq, or Pauline Gedge.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Review of Ghost of Akhenaten 31 Mar 2008
By S. Mullins - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
i wouldnt recomend this book. It was not what I expected at all. The title hints at greatness but falls far short of that
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