Posts Tagged ‘James Patterson’
The Murder of King Tut by James Patterson and Martin Dugard
The Murder of King Tut by James Patterson and Martin Dugard is an amazing actual crime story of intrigue, emotion and treason that throws new light on the oldest myth of all.
The majority public comprehend the fundamentals about King Tut and the discovery of the items from his mausoleum. The true events about his death are more murky. What is clear is that he died at a very young age. The authors of The Murder of King Tut present a nearly certainly answer to the young pharaoh’s early death.
The book The Murder of King Tut is written in three parts: Howard Carter’s extensive investigation and ultimate discovery of the tomb in 1922; James Patterson’s writing of this book; and the consequences of Tut’s time.
Further than 3,000 years after the dying of the Pharaoh Tutankhamen, controversy is still about how he died. Was it an ordinary dying or was he murdered? The possibility that TutankhamenDidn’t die of normal reasons was first elevated 28 years ago when an X-ray diagnosis of his mummy was made by the anatomy department of the University of Liverpool. It presented that the king may have died from a blow to the back of his head.
The suggestiongave rise to a discussion among Egyptologists and scientists. If he were murdered, who did it? Was it Aye, Tutankhamen’s vizier who climbed to the throne after his death and married his wife? Otherwise, was it Horernhab, the army officer who grew into king after Aye’s short four-year rule? Some archaeologistsrecommended that Aye and Horemhab might have shared the guilt, working in cahoots to kill the boy.
You can read more about The Murder of King Tut by James Patterson and Martin Dugard on Best Books Review.