Derek Adie Flower, Inquest on Imhotep (Lulu, 1998)
Derek Adie Flower has a great imagination and a flair for storytelling, and he has hit on a great tale in this book. For some reason ancient Egypt, pharaohs and curses grip the imagination as few other eras in history. And in this book he has it all -- secret societies, unexplained deaths and that important ingredient, romance. Unfortunately, the one thing Flower left out is editing. This 224-page novel gives us a good story relatively well told that will keep the general reader hooked and eager to find the answers. But, with a good editor or even a ruthless rewrite, Flower might have produced 160 pages of tight writing that would not have aggravated the more pedantic readers. Either way, he has produced a book worth the effort of seeking out if your interests lean towards historical mystery and mayhem. I would like to see other works by this writer, tightly edited and with less of the colloquial style adopted here. ![]() |
![]() Rambles.NET review by Nicky Rossiter 17 April 2010 Agree? Disagree? Send us your opinions! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |