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Lion in the Valley

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Country
  
United States

Publication date
  
1986

Author
  
Barbara Mertz

Genre
  
Historical mystery

4.2/5
Goodreads


Language
  
English

Originally published
  
1986

Preceded by
  
The Mummy Case

Publisher
  
Atheneum Books

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Media type
  
Print (Hardback & Paperback)

Pages
  
291 pp (paperback edition)

ISBN
  
0-689-11619-5 (paperback edition)

Followed by
  
The Deeds of the Disturber

Similar
  
Barbara Mertz books, Amelia Peabody series books, Historical mystery books

Lion in the Valley is the 1986 fourth novel in a series of historical mystery novels, written by Elizabeth Peters and featuring fictional sleuth and archaeologist Amelia Peabody.

Contents

Plot summary

The Emersons return to Egypt in 1895-96 to excavate at Dahshoor - finally, some real pyramids for Amelia!

In looking for a keeper for Ramses, they find a demoralized Englishman named Donald Fraser. Donald has troubled family relationships and a hashish habit, both of which Amelia means to reform. Enid Debenham, a young lady whose behavior scandalizes Cairo society, also takes a hand when Amelia takes her under her wing.

Meanwhile, the Master Criminal reappears personally, taking an interest not only in illegally obtained antiquities but in the person of Amelia herself.

The story is key in the series because it is the first time the reader learns the pseudonym of the Master Criminal: Sethos. It is the name of a number of Pharaohs, and is tied to Set or Seth, the Egyptian god of the desert. Sethos interacts in a number of ways, including offering gifts and returning the communion set stolen from Mazghuna the previous year. Sethos also appears in a number of guises, only one of which Amelia sees through. She does, however, assume a number of others are either Sethos or in his gang, almost always incorrectly.

Donald and Enid return in a later novel, Seeing a Large Cat.

Explanation of the novel's title

The title is taken from the Battle of Kadesh Inscriptions of King Ramses II:

"Lord of fear, great of fame,
In the hearts of all the lands.
Great of awe, rich in glory,
As is Set upon his mountain. ...
Like a wild lion in a valley of goats."

References

Lion in the Valley Wikipedia