What was it like to grow up in the royal palace of ancient Egypt, and to
become king--pharaoh!--at the age of nine? And then one day to wake up
dead and trapped in a tomb for three thousand years with nothing to read
and no one to talk to except a ba-bird, a cow-headed bed with
personality problems, and a few gilded gods? Tutankhamun, the famous
boy-king of ancient Egypt, is here to tell us--in his own hieroglyphs.
From driving chariots and annoying his sisters at the palace to playing
board games with miniature statues in his tomb, he describes the ups and
downs of his short life and his very long afterlife, and how everything
changed when Howard Carter found him and his magnificent treasures in
1922 and introduced him--and his faithful but cheeky monkey, Fingers--to
the modern world. From the author of How I Became a Mummy, this colorful
first-hand account of the life and times of Egypt's best-loved pharaoh
will fascinate children and Egyptologists of all ages.