This latest in the series of publications of the field work of the
Epigraphic Survey is certainly the crowning achievement of the seventy
years the Oriental Institute's artists and epigraphers have labored at
the walls of the temples and tombs of Luxor, recording the inscriptions
and reliefs in facsimile for posterity. Not only is The Festival
Procession of Opet the Survey's largest volume to date, it is also the
most sophisticated in terms of the finesse of the rendering of the
facsimile drawings with indications of the different types of man-made
and environmental damage suffered by the complicated surviving Luxor
Temple Colonnade Hall reliefs indicated in minute details - which must
have taken countless hours of inking by the many Survey artists
(eighteen by actual count) who worked six months in the field each year
recording the Opet Festival reliefs from 1974 to 1992. [From a book
brief in KMT 5:4 (1994/95) 86]. The portfolio of large drawings is
accompanied by a text booklet, which has a list of plates,
transliterations and translations of the texts, commentary and glossary.