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Reviews for Pharaoh

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Smith (Desert God, 2014, etc.) continues the saga of Lord Taita, loyal consigliere to Pharaoh Tamose.Sadly, as Taita drives the last of the invading Hyksos from Egypt, Tamose dies. Thats troublesome for Taita because Tamoses eldest son and heir is a cowardly, hedonistic pervert who calls himself Utteric Turo the Great. Utteric fears Taita. Utteric is also wary of his own brother, Rameses, next in line for the throne. Utteric betrays them both, but after imprisonment, derring-do, and escape, Taita and Rameses sail to Greeces Bay of Githion, where theyre assured support from King Hurotas. Hurotas was once Tamoses Capt. Zaras, an Egyptian officer, later persona non grata because he eloped with Tamoses sister, Princess Tehuti, after being assigned to escort her to marry Minos of Crete. Tehuti and Hurotas beautiful daughter, Princess Serrena of Sparta, is like Taitaintelligent, possessor of warrior skills, master of a mythical blue sword with a ruby pommeland because she was sired by Apollo, divine. Hurotas and Taita contrive alliances among multiple kings to invade Egypt and overthrow Utteric. These Egyptians seemed fascinated with Greek gods, but the novel skids into standard action territoryall swords, chariots, and magic with palace intrigue and set-piece battles. Theres a Serrena-Rameses magnetic attraction but little other human drama. Smiths Taita continues to think much of himselfmy abundant charms soothed...my exquisite...protocol prevailedbut constant self-appreciation creates an unsympathetic hero. The dialogue doesnt distract, and characters are generally all good or all bad. The bad die gruesomely while the pace, like Taitas self-regard, never slackens. A swords-and-sandals action-adventure no worse or better than the first five in Smiths Egyptian series. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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