The Coming of the Queen (novel): Difference between revisions

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* Haliwas compares Carra's find of Erimem's tomb to that of [[Howard Carter]] finding [[Tut-Ankh-Amen]]'s.
* Haliwas compares Carra's find of Erimem's tomb to that of [[Howard Carter]] finding [[Tut-Ankh-Amen]]'s.
* ''[[The King's Lost Sons]]'' is the display held in the [[National Museum of Egyptian Antiquities]] for Carra's findings.
* ''[[The King's Lost Sons]]'' is the display held in the [[National Museum of Egyptian Antiquities]] for Carra's findings.
* Erimem gives Hanek a [[gold]] statue of a [[falcon]] depicting the god [[Horus]].


== Notes ==
== Notes ==

Revision as of 14:10, 20 June 2019

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prose stub

The Coming of the Queen was a Big Finish novel released through their New Worlds imprint in 2005. Written by the creator of Erimem, Iain McLaughlin, and his frequent collaborator, Claire Bartlett, it was a kind of "origin tale" for the uncrowned pharaoh and latter-day Queen of Peladon.

The book centred on the palace intrigue that had occurred in the Egyptian court a few years before Erimem had met the Doctor and Peri. By expanding greatly on the scenario hinted at in The Eye of the Scorpion, it gave the reader a portrait the everyday aspects of her family life as a teenager. Since this impacted on her royalty, though, the novel also explained exactly why Erimem found herself in the position of being the most legitimate heir to her father, and why she was not well-remembered by modern historians.

Publisher's summary

An extraordinary discovery in the Valley of the Kings leaves historians bemused and asking the question...
...Who was Erimem?

The only daughter of the great Pharaoh Amenhotep II, Princess Erimemushinteperem has lived a comfortable, privileged life safe in Pharaoh's luxurious palace in Thebes, surrounded by servants, slaves and friends. But her sixteenth year will bring Erimem and her brothers into contact with war, death, treachery, assassins and tragedy, and will lead her to a destiny she had never imagined... or wanted.

Characters

References

Notes

to be added

Continuity

  • This novel explains that Antranak was a personal mentor to Erimem, and not merely a guide for the Egyptian heir-apparent. He is shown here to be a close teacher to Erimem, even when her brothers are the more obvious heirs. (AUDIO: The Eye of the Scorpion)

External links