The Writing of the Gods: The Race to Decode the Rosetta Stone
R**N
Totally Fascinating History
Truly, an incredible sequence of events in the de-coding of theRosetta Stone. This is remarkably well written and researched.I recently read Down the Great Unknown by this author and was very impressedwith his style of writing. That book, too, was very well researched, truthful, and accurate.
S**R
A Real-Life Indiana Jones Adventure - a Historical Page-Turner
(SLIGHT SPOILER ALERT BELOW, second paragraph) Wow, I really enjoyed this book. I've always wondered how we were able to decode the Rosetta stone, and now I know. But the technical part of the story is only the beginning. Dolnick really enriched the basic part of the story - the decoding - with some wonderful side stories. The decoding thread alone could have been dry and academic, but it was very interesting. How could anyone decode a dead language? If someone in the future saw our language, how could they possibly figure it out? Even if they figured our our alphabet stands for sounds, they would have no idea what those sounds meant. So "cat" stands for the "k" sound with the "a" sound with a "t" sound... how would they ever know we meant the felines who lived with us? And how much would "c" sometimes sounding like a "k" and other times sounding like an "s" throw them off? It really was a herculean effort to decode Egyptian, which is not just alphabetic. The comparisons between Egyptian hieroglyphs and other languages illustrate the difficulties Young and Champollion encountered very well. The historical asides added excitement to the already interesting description of how these two decoded the text. I had no idea Napoleon's troops discovered the Rosetta stone, or that the British took possession of it after Napoleon's failures in Egypt. I also was unaware of the Egyptomania that swept through the world in the early 1800s, inspiring even the design of US currency. And Dolnick pointed out the incredible feat of the Egyptians and put it in context: their empire lasted 30 centuries. They didn't even have the wheel, but they had perhaps the longest-lasting empire in history. (The US has only been around for two centuries and some change!)The characters are real-life Indiana Jones types: explorers, wealthy dilettantes, con men, and struggling academics. The sub story about Hatshepsut and her incredible monuments could inspire a movie.SPOILER ALERT: The language itself is fascinating, a combination of childish rebuses, symbols, and alphabetical characters. Honestly, it resembles no other language I'm aware of more closely than text messaging today, with its emojis and puns and slang.I do wish Dolnick had added a bit about where the pharaohs came from. My understanding is that they were Greek and, until Cleopatra, none of them spoke Egyptian. How did the Greeks rule the longest lasting empire? I suspect it was by brutal domination. How did the Greek rulers in Egypt outlive their own empire in the Mediterranean? Did they consider themselves Greek? Did they have regular contact with the ancestral homeland? Why didn't they defend Greece from Rome? Why did the pharaohs not import technology from the European Romans and Greeks? How on earth did the Egyptians avoid being conquered by the technologically advanced Roman army for so long? I guess I'll need to read some more books to find out, and I wouldn't be inspired to if it weren't for this book.Highly recommended!
K**L
Great story and. very well written and illustrated.
It's a fascinating story, and it is told every so well. The author knows how to illustrate his point via current day examples. And the drawings and pictures are terrific.
H**M
Enjoyable and Educational
A great read if you are interested in Egyptian history. Beautifully written. I just finished it and will read it again. It almost feels like a novel, but impregnated with historical facts. Your brain will thank you as you read this book. Enjoy.
H**N
Surprisingly good writing with a good mix of tension and knowledge
I will buy more books of this author.
Trustpilot
1 week ago
3 days ago