![]() ![]() There are really two stories going on at once. It contains maps, “mummy cloth” samples, postcards and travel tags that look appropriately vintage, and page after page of sketches and “diary entries” about life in Ancient Egypt. Like Dragonology, Egyptology is an interactive book aimed at kids in elementary school. When her diary was discovered, nearly eighty years later, it was published in a facsimile so that scholars could benefit from Ms. However, Emily Sands and her expedition disappeared without a trace, and her family long suspected that she had fallen victim to bandits or wild beasts. As she traveled down the Nile, Sands recorded her observations in a diary. She was armed with a mysterious papyrus and funded by her patroness, the Lady Farncombe. ![]() In 1926, the ambitious Egyptologist Emily Sands set out with an expedition to uncover the long lost Tomb of Osiris, the mythical king turned god of the dead in the Egyptian pantheon. This year, I thought it would be fun to look back and review some of my favorite volumes from the series. Every year, a new book would come out, and the quality of each volume was such that in spite of the fact that I was well outside the intended audience age range, I had to check them out. ![]() I remember thinking at the time that it was the perfect Christmas present for a kid. ![]() Back in 2003, Dragonology hit bookstore shelves, launching the “Ologies” series. ![]()
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