This is the fifth book in the Amelia Peabody series and is set in England in the Summer of 1896. The Emerson family have only just returned from an excavation season in Egypt when they're approached by a wastrel brother who wants to dump his children on Amelia and a journalist who has senationalised recent mummy-related deaths and wants the Emersons to solve the mystery (solely for his readers peace of mind).
Needless to say, Amelia, Emerson and Ramses cannot resist a mystery - even when Emerson pretends he can.
This was enjoyable. I liked being in England for a whole book. It was interesting to see the difference in their daily lives and the culture of the era. I also liked how much Peters entwines the growing consciousness of women and their rights, as they slowly evolve, into each book. Even Peabody, a devout suffragist, finds herself thinking in male inequality terms and has to challenge herself to think of women as equal and capable of doing whatever they want to do.
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