Set in New Kingdom Egypt, The Cat of Bubastes follows Amuba, a Rebu prince enslaved in the Nile valley, whose friendship with Chebron, son of a high priest, triggers crisis when a sacred cat is slain. What begins as domestic training and temple routine unfurls into flight, conspiracy, and survival across river, marsh, and desert. Henty couples brisk incident with exposition, weaving religion, craft, warfare, and law into a narrative that reflects Victorian Egyptology; the central sacrilege becomes a lens on piety, civic order, and priestly power. A journalist and war correspondent before turning to historical fiction for the young, G. A. Henty (18321902) wrote with a reporters economy and a schoolmasters pedagogy. He mined contemporary Egyptology and travel literature to furnish convincing material culture, while channeling Victorian ideals of duty, resourcefulness, and Protestant fortitude through adolescent protagonists. His outsiders curiosity about ancient institutions, joined to a taste for tactical problem-solving, shapes the books blend of ethnography and escape. Readers of historical adventure, students of Ancient Egypt, and educators seeking discussable fiction will find this a lively, instructive tale. Read it for pace and period detail, and also for the ethical questions it poses.Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the authors voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readabledistilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.
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