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Amelia Peabody
Crocodile on the Sandbank
The Curse of the Pharaohs
 
The Mummy Case
 
Lion in the Valley
 
Deeds of the Disturber
 

The Last Camel Died at Noon
 
The Snake, the Crocodile and the Dog
  
The Hippopotamus Pool 
Seeing a Large Cat
 
The Ape Who Guards the Balance
 
The Falcon at the Portal
 
He Shall Thunder in the Sky
 

Lord of the Silent
The Golden One
Children of the Storm
Amelia Peabody's Egypt



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 Collecting Amelia's : A Guide to Elizabeth Peters' First Editions
First Edition Cover  - Curse of the Pharaohs - Artist,  Charles Geer
Second Book in the Series

The Amelia Peabody Series
The Curse of the Pharaohs

The Curse of the Pharaohs by Elizabeth Peters
First Edition - United States
Published by Dodd, Mead, & Company, 1981.
Cover Artist - Charles Geer
ISBN: 0-396-07963-6
Other Editions -  Armchair Detective | Barnes and Noble

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In the middle of the dreary English winter, Amelia and Radcliffe are opining for Egypt.  The inevitable result of their marriage, namely their son Walter Peabody Emerson or "Ramses",  had resulted in their confinement to England until he became old enough to withstand the rigors of Archaeological digging. (Elizabeth Peters discusses Ramses in her introduction to the Armchair Detective Edition of this book.)

Then, on a stormy night, Lady Baskerville bursts into their sitting room  to declare that "Radcliffe" was the only person she trusts to take over the excavations that she and her late (very recently late..) husband were conducting in the Valley of the Kings.

The Lady Baskerville is very beautiful and very persuasive, and seems to have known "Radcliffe" at some former time. Amelia,  fighting back her instinct to eject the Lady immediately, bravely suggests that Emerson should take up the position while she stays home with Ramses.  But Emerson, knowing that he would be miserable without "Peabody", states he won't go without her.

Packing Ramses off to stay with Evelyn and Walter Emerson, they embark on the next steamer to Alexandria.

Once in Luxor, the trouble begins.  Bodies are falling all about them and Emerson and Amelia are forced to solve the mysteries of the murders so that they can have a little peace and quiet to excavate the tomb. 

Abdullah and the skilled excavation crew of Egyptians trained by Emerson return in this book, and will feature in most of the succeeding volumes. 

Ramses is introduced in this book, along with the English servants who pop up in later volumes. 

This book also introduces three recurring characters - Cyrus Vandergelt, Bastet the cat, and Kevin O'Connell, reporter for The Daily Yell.  

Three recurring themes are confirmed for the series of books - matchmaking and young lovers, antiquities theft and murder, and the competition between Emerson and Amelia to solve the mystery.

 

 
 

 
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