The Ape Who Guards the Balance

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Title The Ape Who Guards the Balance
Image:ApeWhoGuardspbk.jpg
First edition cover for The Ape Who Guards the Balance
Author Elizabeth Peters
Country United States
Language English
Series Amelia Peabody mysteries
Genre(s) Mystery, Historical novel
Publisher Avon Books
Released 1998
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 376 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-380-97657-9
Preceded by Seeing a Large Cat
Followed by The Falcon at the Portal

The Ape Who Guards the Balance is the tenth in a series of mystery novels, written by Elizabeth Peters and featuring fictional sleuth and archaeologist Amelia Peabody.

Contents

[edit] Explanation of the novel's title

The book's title refers to the Egyptian god Thoth, the divine scribe who waits for the heart of the dead to be weighed on a scale and judged so that he may record its fate; Thoth is usually represented as having the head of an ibis, but also appears as a baboon or ape with the balancing scales.

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

Luxor, 1906-1907. The Emerson clan is trying to determine where to dig during the upcoming season. But before they even leave England, they encounter Sethos and foil an attempt to kidnap Ameila. Suspicion for the attempt falls on Sethos, but not everyone is sure.

Upon arriving in Egypt, the children, Nefret, Ramses and David, now in their early twenties but still children to Amelia and Emmerson, acquire a magnificent papyrus, but are also stalked. Is Sethos behind this too?

Since Emerson has managed to annoy M. Maspero to the point of distraction, he is initially not even allowed near the Valley of the Kings, where another of Emerson’s rivals and targets of invective, Theodore M. Davis, has the rights to the entire valley. Much to everyone’s surprise, (and possibly with Nefret’s help) Emerson is granted permission by Davis to clean up 3 tombs thought to be already excavated in full, KV3, KV4 and KV5.

Not only does his rival Davis, right next to the debris-filled and empty tomb he excavates, find yet another rich tomb, once again somebody is still after the Emersons -- particularly, it seems, Amelia. But help is on the way, from surprising, or perhaps not so surprising, quarters.

[edit] Allusions/references to actual history, geography and current science

In a link to the real world of Egyptology, the greatest irony is that had Emerson continued to dig in KV5, he would have discovered a tomb complex that was far more elaborate that any ever found in Egypt. Instead, the fictional Emerson failed to uncover what the real Dr. Kent Weeks discovered in 1995, finding the most extensive tomb in the Valley of the Kings, built for the children of Ramesses II and containing over 150 rooms, many untouched for thousands of years.

[edit] See also