Again Pauline Gedge writes a vivid believable story of the overthrow of the Hyksos conquerers who had held Eqypt for 200 years. The descendents of the last pharaohs, the family of Seqenenra Tao lead the rebellion(SPOILER ALERT, STOP READING NOW)-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (SPOILER ALERT!!!) but in the first major battle the father of the family, the true pharaoh of Egypt, was been killed in battle. (In the non-fiction book I mentioned in the review of the first book in this trilogy was Nicholas Reeves' "Egypt's False God: Akhenaten". In it one can see a photograph of Seqenenra Tao's mummy with his damaged skull, with the five fatal wounds from mace, arrows,and spears that killed him. Clearly, he fought at the head of his small army against overwhelming odds.
His sons then had to take over the rebellion, and much of the book is given to their efforts to keep the rebellion going without its' leader, and to find ways to overcome the great disparity of numbers against them.
NOTE: These books also give great credit to the Medjay forces, the African fighters who were known through Egypts' long history as powerful guerilla type warriors. I don't know if this was their first historical allied fighting with Egyptians or not, but their role here is very important.
A very good book, bloody and tragic in places as war truly is.