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Amelia Peabody
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The Curse of the Pharaohs
 
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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
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Amelia Peabody's Egypt



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 Collecting Amelia's : A Guide to Elizabeth Peters' First Editions
First Edition Cover  - The Hippopotamus Pool - Artist, Phillip Singer
Eighth Book in the Series

The Amelia Peabody Series
The Hippopotamus Pool

The Hippopotamus Pool by Elizabeth Peters
First Edition - United States
Published by Warner Brothers Books, 1996.
Jacket Design - Mario Pulce
Jacket Illustration - Phil Singer
ISBN: 0-446-51833-6

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It happens in novels, but it has never happened to Amelia and Emerson before.  A Mysterious stranger comes to their room at Shepheard's to offer to show them to a hidden tomb of a Queen.  

They would have laughed it off, but the stranger is killed on the spot. As everyone rushes to seek help, Emerson remains with the body.  Only to be hit on the head and have the body spirited away from the room before the others return.

A body and a hidden tomb - it's just too much for anyone to resist, so off they go to Luxor and the Valley of the Kings, with Ramses, Nefret, Anubis and The Cat Bastet.  Sailing up the Nile in the "Amelia", a dahabeeyah that Emerson has purchased for Amelia.  

The joy of their Cairo departure in this new vessel is marred by the procession of servants heralding the arrival of  the hippopotamus-sized villain Riccetti. Riccetti bluntly warns them of danger and opposition to their hunt for the tomb, confirming, in Amelia's mind, at least, that it exists.

In Luxor they find that the antiquities thieves have gotten bold following the apparent withdrawal of  Sethos, The Master Criminal, from Egypt (see The Snake, The Crocodile and the Dog).  Emerson heads right into the center of the  activity, the village of Gurneh to confront the prominent thieves and forgers. 

 In one of the dirty forger's dens they come across a secret that Abdullah has not revealed.  His grandson, David Todros, the son of his daughter and a Christian foreigner is held in semi slavery as an apprentice to the master forger Hamed. 

The tomb is eventually discovered, David is rescued from his ignoble fate, Ramses if kidnapped and retrieved at least once, and the thieves are revealed. But somewhere in the middle of it all, Sethos reappears and seems to be helping them protect the open and vulnerable tomb. 

As a final "interference" to archaeology, Nefret is kidnapped by cult worshipers of Isis, but she, like Ramses proves to be able to effect her own escapes, as well as stir up her own trouble.

The seeds of hate are harvested as Berthe and a gang of female thieves turn out to be the villains.

The tomb of Queen Tetisheri is often spoken of lovingly by the Family in later volumes of what are being called Amelia's Memoirs.  It is Emerson's claim to fame, as it were. But no tourist has seen it, because he installed heavy doors and refuses to give the keys to the Antiquities Department.

This book introduces the recurring characters of Sir Edward, David Todros and Berthe's capable assistant Matilda. 

 
 

 
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