Read The Lost Army of Cambyses Online
Authors: Paul Sussman
Tags: #Thrillers, #Crime, #Fiction, #General, #Mystery & Detective
Paul Sussman's two great passions have always
been writing and archaeology. He fulfils the
former by working as a freelance journalist and
the latter by spending two months of each year
excavating in Egypt. He lives in London with his
wife.
The Lost Army of Cambyses
is his first
novel, his new novel,
The Last Secret of the
Temple,
is also published by Bantam Books.
Praise for
The Lost Army of Cambyses
'A great adventure, one of the most intriguing mysteries
of the past, a great novel masterfully written'
Valerie Massimo Manfredi, author of
The Spartan
'A tough, sometimes brutal, but always engrossing
thriller. Sussman knows his Egypt, past and present,
and he has the gift of creating engaging heroes of both
sexes and really,
really
vile villains'
Dr. Barbara Mertz, archaeologist
'At last, a thriller that gets away from the hackneyed
old 'curse of Tut' stuff; and since Sussman has actually
excavated in Egypt himself, we can trust his background
detail . . . the fast-paced plot is one among many good
things in this very assured first novel . . . There is also a
great description of a
khamsin,
the sandstorm wind,
and I can vouch for Sussman's accuracy, having been
terrified silly by enduring such a phenomenon myself
Scotland on Sunday
'Gripping . . . a spine-chilling, fast-paced thriller
packed . . . It has all the ingredients of a James Bond
adventure: exotic locations, priceless antiquities, evil
fanatics bent on global domination, brutal murders,
corrupt policemen, human heroism, and it keeps you
guessing right up to the final chapter. It's rare to find a
book which sets your heartbeat racing as you timidly
but compulsively turn the page, terrified at what
might jump out in the next paragraph. But in a style
reminiscent of Patricia Cornwell's early books,
The
Lost Army of Cambyses
shocks as well as enthralls . . .
A compelling read'
Sunday Business Post
'Adrenaline-packed . . . combines all the elements of a
truly great adventure story – a 2,000 year old historical
mystery, buried treasure, a race against time – with a
profound knowledge of, and feel for, the land of Egypt,
both past and present. At the end you feel like you've
been on a rollercoaster, in a library, and down the Nile
all at the same time . . . Superbly evocative, with a huge
epic sweep'
Crime Time
'A textured, well-researched and expertly paced debut . . .
the murders and thrills accumulate . . . truly inventive'
Publishers Weekly
'An enjoyable adventure story, replete with archaeological
lore and set against a backdrop of Islamic militant action'
Spectator
'An all-action archaeological adventure . . . an edge of
your seat thrill ride . . . There is also a great feeling
of the desert's vastness, especially in the cinematic
adrenaline-packed ending'
Wealden Times
Also by Paul Sussman
THE LAST SECRET OF THE TEMPLE
and published by Bantam Books
THE
LOST ARMY
OF
CAMBYSES
PAUL SUSSMAN
This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied,
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Adobe ISBN: 9781407041216
Version 1.0
www.randomhouse.co.uk
THE LOST ARMY OF CAMBYSES
A BANTAM BOOK : 9780553818031
Originally published in Great Britain by Bantam Press,
a division of Transworld Publishers
PRINTING HISTORY
Bantam Press edition published 2002
Bantam edition published 2003
Bantam edition reissued 2006
7 9 10 8 6
Copyright © Paul Sussman 2002
Map and illustrations © Neil Gower 2002
The extract on page 7 from
The Histories
by Herodotus,
translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt, revised by John Marincola
(Penguin Classics 1954, second revised edition 1996),
translation copyright 1954 by Aubrey de Sélincourt, revised
edition copyright © John Marincola, 1996, is reproduced by
permission of Penguin Books Ltd.
The right of Paul Sussman to be identified as the author of
this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77
and 78 of the Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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To beautiful Alicky,
for putting up with me,
and to Mum and Dad,
for supporting but never pushing
'The force which was sent against the Ammonians
started from Thebes with guides, and can be
traced as far as the town of Oasis, which . . . is
seven days journey across the sand from Thebes.
General report has it that the army got as far as
this, but of its subsequent fate there is no news
whatsoever. It never reached the Ammonians and
it never returned to Egypt. There is, however, a
story told by the Ammonians themselves and by
others who heard it from them, that when the men
had left Oasis, and in their march across the desert
had reached a point about midway between the
town and the Ammonian border, a southerly wind
of extreme violence drove the sand over them in
heaps as they were taking their mid-day meal, so
that they disappeared forever.'
Herodotus,
The Histories,
Book Three,
translated by Aubrey de Sélincourt