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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

804.0. "Pharaohs in Outer Space!" by SNOC02::SKENNAR () Tue Jun 20 1989 05:37

    Could you suggest some SF titles written with an egyptian flavour, e.g.
    The Ruins of Isis by Marion Zimmer Bradley.  I really am fond of that
    period in history, you know pyramids, pharoahs etc and am fascinated
    when combined with off-world adventures. 
    
    Much appreciated.
    
    Marilyn
    (down
     under)
    
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804.1ZelaznyELRIC::MARSHALLhunting the snarkTue Jun 20 1989 16:1315
 _Creatures_of_Light_and_Darkness_ by Roger Zelazny.
Its about a "superior" race who assume the roles of various Egyptian Dieties
and have come to believe themselves to actually be those deities.

On that level it is similar to _Lord_of_Light_ by Zelazny for the Hindu 
pantheon, but LoL is better.

BTW, the two are really not similar at all, other than being loosely based 
on a particular pantheon.

                                                   
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804.2Falling WomanSQM::MCCAFFERTYTue Jun 20 1989 17:495
    Another that is not Egyptian but you might find interesting is The
    Falling Woman by Pat Murphy which combines modern day archaeology
    with Mayan mysticism.
    
    						- John
804.3Powers and Rice...LDYBUG::LAVEYX never ever marks the spot.Tue Jun 20 1989 21:5715
Tim Powers' _The Anubis Gates_ is an interesting read.  It's set
primarily in the early nineteenth century, and combines (quite an
interesting list!): time travel, Romantic literature and historic
figures out of the Romantic period (Coleridge and Byron),
gypsies, lycanthropy, Egyptian rituals, "unions" of beggars, and
other stuff.

I haven't read this one (yet), but look for the trade paperback
of Anne Rice's latest book, _The Mummy, Or, Ramses the Damned_. I
believe the basic premise is that Ramses the pharoah is/was
another type of immortal being, similar to the vampires in Rice's
Vampire Trilogy.  I don't know how much of the book focuses
specifically on the time period when Ramses ruled though.

-- Cathy
804.4Pharaohs in SpaceSNOC02::SKENNARTue Jun 20 1989 22:3710
    Re: .1 & .2
    
    Thank you both very much for responding.
    
    More, please ....
    
    Marilyn
    (down
     under)
    
804.6Anubis GatesCSC32::C_OUIMETTEWampeters and FomaThu Jun 22 1989 20:265
    	A second vote for "The Anubis Gates". This was a lot of fun, one of
    those books I wish I could read again for the first time....
    
    						Chuck
    
804.7Eric von who?POLAR::LACAILLEThere's a madness to my methodMon Jun 26 1989 19:355
    
    	How about 'Chariots of the God's'....oh thats right...thats
    not fiction right?   ;-)
    
    Charlie
804.8WMOIS::B_REINKEIf you are a dreamer, come in..Fri Jun 30 1989 16:044
    Andre Norton has done at least one book with an Eygptian theme.
    I'll check at home and see if I can find the title.
    
    Bonnie
804.9Wraiths of TimeBUFFER::SOWENOh, any name- Algernon- for example.Fri Jun 30 1989 16:238
    re -.1
    
    I think a title of an Andre Norton Egyptian-type novel is Wraiths of
    Time.  I last read it five years ago, and as far as I remember, it has
    something to do with a woman and some mysterious museum artifacts.  
    I read it a few times- it's pretty enjoyable.
    
    -Sandy
804.10WMOIS::B_REINKEIf you are a dreamer, come in..Fri Jun 30 1989 16:585
    Sandy,
    
    That's the book I was thinking of! Thankyou.
    
    Bonnie
804.11Blossom CulpATSE::WAJENBERGThis area zoned for twilight.Wed Jul 12 1989 14:0412
    There's "Blossom Culp and the Mummy's Curse" (or something like that)
    by Richard Peck.  This is a fantasy for teens, set in 1914.  The
    heroine and narrator is Blossom Culp, a school-girl/street-urchin in
    the Maerican midwest.  She is also the heroine of "Ghosts I Have Been"
    and "The Dreadful Future of Blossom Culp," and she appears in a
    supporting role in "The Ghost Belonged to Me."
    
    Blossom has Second Sight, and often finds herself rubbing elbows with
    unhappy ghosts, in this case the ka of a desecrated Egyptian mummy that
    was abandonned by a circus when it was chased out of town.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
804.12TetrarchMOSAIC::MAXSONRepeal GravityTue Jul 25 1989 20:0915
    A very odd, very enticing book is "The Tetrarch" by Alex Comfort (?),
    a bizzare mythology involving an alternate world incorporating
    Early Civilization lifetyles with advanced psychological technology.
    In particular, "Mandalas" are moire-patterned drawings which induce a
    psychological state in the viewer - some are used as weapons!
    
    Lots of neat, imaginative ideas in this book frustratingly webbed
    together by a somewhat thin plot.
    
    I don't think you will recommend this book for a Hugo when you finish
    it, but the imagination and settings involved should indeed be worth
    a read.
    
    Mark M, Speaker for the Not-Feeling-Too-Well.