Small and frail, Tutankhamen was an all but ignored member of the royal
family of the great Egyptian pharoah Amenhotep III. At the school of the
"menoi," or tutors, he did not excel at physical activities with the
other royal princes. Keeping to himself, he observed and admired the
work of his father's craftsmen, who built glorious temples to Egypt's
many gods. Someday he too would find a gift for those gods.
Then Amenhotep III died and the unpopular reign of Tutankhamen's brother
ended in mystery. Who now would be pharoah? Could it be a boy of only
ten?
As he did with the life of "Saint Valentine" (Atheneum, 1992), Robert
Sabuda combines simple text with artwork true to the historical period
in which Tutankhamen lived.