REVIEWED BY WALTER ALBERT:         


PAUL DOHERTY – An Evil Spirit Out of the West. Headline, hardcover/trade paperback, August 2003; pb, April 2004.

PAUL DOHERTY

   Doherty just keeps turning out his historical mysteries, with Evil Spirit the first in a trilogy narrated by Mahu, a commoner who becomes the protector and confidant of Akenaten, the heretical Pharaoh who replaced the traditional religion that honored many gods with a monotheistic system.

   This first novel details the rise and fall of Akenaten, with the the succeeding volumes The Season of the Hyaena and The Year of the Cobra continuing the saga with the beginning of the reign of Tutankhamen and then, the sudden, unexpected return of his father.

PAUL DOHERTY

   Mahu is the center of this first novel, the intelligent commoner and adviser who seems to be something of a staple in the Egyptian mysteries I’ve read, and he will apparently continue his role with the reign of Tutankamen, although how he will manage to serve two masters in the third volume intrigues me.

   The Spies of Sobeck, the seventh novel in Doherty’s series featuring Amerotke, the Chief Justice of Thebes, was published in April and is available from Amazon. I’ll just note the publication here, since I don’t plan to do a detailed review.

   As long as Doherty keeps writing Egyptian mysteries, I’ll keep on reading them. They’re uniformly well done, and my assessment is that if you like one you’ll want to read all of them. And with that, I rest my case.