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A review by littlestcabbage
The Egypt Game by Zilpha Keatley Snyder
3.0
I chose this book for the Heather and Peter Book Club of Two because Peter read (and loved) The Westing Game based on my recommendation and most book sites recommend this title if you dug that book. I liked the idea of both of us reading a book for the first time. His mom had read it and gave her approval, so we were off to the races.
On the plus side, the children's relationships are REALLY well-drawn here. Snyder handles well the notion of loving a friend but being embarrassed by them, or wanting/needing to fit in at school to get by, or mob mentality, or doing stuff that you think is kind of boring because your best friend is into it, or being scared, or being brave, and so on. I liked that most of the kids were a little hard to love (well, Melanie is pretty much just awesome all around, but that's understandable). I liked, too, that there was a great emphasis on research-based imagination. It makes the idea that these kids are making up "Egyptian" rituals (some of which are, I'm sure, highly insulting and a bit racist) a little easier to stomach. They're not just getting their notion of Ancient Egypt from, like, watching The Mummy. They're reading history books and THEN making stuff up on their own. I accept.
(Side note: I dug up some readers' guides to The Egypt Game online so I could target some of my questions to Peter in the letter I wrote him. One classroom plan involved WATCHING THE MUMMY TO TEACH YOUR STUDENTS ABOUT ANCIENT EGYPT. Oh god.)
On the minus side, the story leaves a little to be desired, structurally. There are rather convenient jumps in time, and the central conflict (there is A SERIAL MURDERER who is killing kids in the town so our band of imagination gamers is not allowed outside for a while) comes a bit late in the book and feels quite manufactured and strange. That said, I did like that the kids don't just return to their gameplay after some more adults know about it. This is, I think, a bit central to the way kid brains work, and I found it refreshing that Snyder clued into that.
A good read for imaginative kids, for sure.
On the plus side, the children's relationships are REALLY well-drawn here. Snyder handles well the notion of loving a friend but being embarrassed by them, or wanting/needing to fit in at school to get by, or mob mentality, or doing stuff that you think is kind of boring because your best friend is into it, or being scared, or being brave, and so on. I liked that most of the kids were a little hard to love (well, Melanie is pretty much just awesome all around, but that's understandable). I liked, too, that there was a great emphasis on research-based imagination. It makes the idea that these kids are making up "Egyptian" rituals (some of which are, I'm sure, highly insulting and a bit racist) a little easier to stomach. They're not just getting their notion of Ancient Egypt from, like, watching The Mummy. They're reading history books and THEN making stuff up on their own. I accept.
(Side note: I dug up some readers' guides to The Egypt Game online so I could target some of my questions to Peter in the letter I wrote him. One classroom plan involved WATCHING THE MUMMY TO TEACH YOUR STUDENTS ABOUT ANCIENT EGYPT. Oh god.)
On the minus side, the story leaves a little to be desired, structurally. There are rather convenient jumps in time, and the central conflict (there is A SERIAL MURDERER who is killing kids in the town so our band of imagination gamers is not allowed outside for a while) comes a bit late in the book and feels quite manufactured and strange. That said, I did like that the kids don't just return to their gameplay after some more adults know about it. This is, I think, a bit central to the way kid brains work, and I found it refreshing that Snyder clued into that.
A good read for imaginative kids, for sure.