The Last Camel Died at Noon
AuthorElizabeth Peters
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
SeriesAmelia Peabody series mysteries
GenreHistorical mystery
PublisherWarner Books
Publication date
1991
Media typePrint (paperback)
Pagesxi, 352
ISBN0-446-51483-7
OCLC299743985
813/.54 20
LC ClassPS3563.E747 L37 1991
Preceded byDeeds of the Disturber 
Followed byThe Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog 

The Last Camel Died at Noon is the sixth in a series of historical mystery novels, written by Elizabeth Peters and featuring fictional sleuth and archaeologist Amelia Peabody. It was first published in 1991. This story in the historical mystery series has a new genre; Last Camel satirizes adventure novels in the tradition of Henry Rider Haggard. One reviewer considered this an homage to Haggard.[1] The story is set in the 1897–98 dig season, partly in Egypt, then moving west to Sudan.

Plot summary

At home in autumn 1897, the Emersons are disturbed by a visit from aristocrats Viscount Blacktower and the grandson by his younger son, Reggie Forthright. The viscount is concerned about his older son, explorer Willoughby Forth, who disappeared fourteen years ago in the desert west of the Nile in the Sudan. The viscount received a communication from his son a few days earlier, unsure how it reached London. It contained a letter written by his older son on papyrus and a map sketched on paper. The map was on the back of a page from Emerson's own notebook, drawn by Willie Forth, with landmarks en route to the Lost Oasis. Blacktower wants the Emersons to find his son, or learn his fate. Emerson does not accept. After the men leave, Radcliffe says he met Willie and his new wife in Africa 14 years earlier. Willie wanted to travel to a place of myth in the Sudan with his much younger wife, an unsafe area in 1883. That is when the map was sketched.

Prior to that visit, Radcliffe had decided to work that season in Sudan near the River Nile, as he saw chances for new discoveries, but not in the western desert. Radcliffe, Amelia, and Ramses travel to the Sudan, to excavate at Gebel Barkal and Napata, the first Nubian capital. They travel by camel, not via the Nile, to Nuri with its pyramids. The sudden appearance of Reggie Forthright at their dig causes them to alter their plans. Reggie seeks his uncle, trekking to the Lost Oasis, sending back a messenger reporting he was seized; the Emersons go after him, travelling on camels in the desert.

The Emersons need rescue themselves when all but one of their men desert, all their camels die a few days out, and Amelia falls ill, unconscious. The last faithful servant says he can run to the oasis ahead, for water. He does so, and then brings them to the Lost Oasis.

Amelia suffers the worst, taking weeks to fully recover. The Lost Oasis has the remnants of the Meroitic royalty who ruled Ancient Egypt during the Late Period. That one loyal servant is Tarek, one of two princely brothers struggling for power after the king’s death.

Once in full health, the archaeologists are amazed to be amidst the very civilization whose relics and writings they have studied. The intrigues, politics, and social mores push and prod the Emersons in ways new to them, compared to a usual dig near the Nile. They work to learn what happened to Willie Forth, his wife, their child, and his nephew Reggie. Amelia and Emerson walk out to the cemetery, see the grave of Willie Forth, who had taught English to many. They are puzzled that his wife is not buried next to him.

Dinner with the princes, a visit with the dowager queen, clandestine meetings with handmaidens to the gods, and plans to escape make their daily life lively. Young Ramses is dressed as a boy in that ancient culture, befriended by many.

Nefret, now a priestess to Isis, is introduced to the Emersons, the teenaged daughter of Forth, raised first by her father and then by those taught by her father, in her chambers. She was told that her mother died young. She wants to leave. Then Reggie appears in the Emersons’ chambers, released from a dungeon, and is a chancy ally to the Emersons.

These English people must escape or be killed. Ramses hides in the tunnels when his parents are taken, where he links with Tarek.

In a major event at the temple to select the next king, the god Aminreh speaks his decision. All three Emersons are present along with the soldiers and priests. The two brothers battle to the death and Tarek, friend to the Emersons, wins the crown.

Radcliffe participates in the blood-soaked battle; victorious Tarek leads Amelia to her husband in a far away room with Willie’s wife, still alive. She had rejected her newborn daughter and is now obese and alone, saying she is the wife of a god, and had requested Radcliffe be carried to her. After the struggle Radcliffe had with her soldier so he could leave, Mrs Forth fell dead. Tarek has never told Nefret that story of her mother’s rejection of her newborn baby, and the Emersons agree never to mention it to her. Tarek made his trip to England with the letter and map so that Nefret would be returned to her people.

Tarek has prepared a caravan to get them out of the Lost Oasis safely.

Reggie then reveals his true motive, to kill anyone blocking him from inheriting all his grandfather’s wealth. As far back as London, he shot at Tarek, the messenger who delivered Willie’s letter and map, killing Tarek’s half-brother with pistol shots heard by the Emersons at home. Reggie had put poison in the camel food for the Emerson’s trek, assuring the Emersons would not reach the hidden city. Reggie holds a gun to Ramses’ head; Nefret interferes with that, and Reggie’s plot is stopped. He is left behind, tied up and disarmed. The Emersons and Nefret travel out, escorted by Tarek’s men in the caravan to an oasis.

Reviews

The title of this book is identical to the first sentence of the 1981 thriller The Key to Rebecca by Ken Follett.[2] The Last Camel Died at Noon most closely follows the tradition with plot elements like a lost and ancient civilization, a young English girl serving as its high priestess, an evil prince, a wronged noble prince who wants to free the slaves, kidnappings, escapes, mazes of tunnels (and palaces) hand-carved from cliffs.

Publishers Weekly considers Amelia Peabody to be very like Indiana Jones but in the Victorian Era, and likes the intricate plotting, as the author “laces her usual intricate plotting with Amelia's commonsense approach to hygiene and manners, and coyly delicate references to vigorously enjoyed connubial pleasures.”[3]

Another reviewer noted the difference between this novel and those earlier in the series. “Going in an entirely different direction than her previous novels, this is Amelia Peabody does Indiana Jones, or, as the author herself says, H. Rider Haggard.”[4]

The humor used by the author was noted. “[T]hose readers who have enjoyed the series as a whole will likely find the author’s tribute to Haggard to be a humorous one,”.[5]

In his upbeat review of this novel, Peter Theroux in The New York Times said “It is enough to say that so rollicking and mythical are their adventures that comparisons must be made (and are made, in fact, by several characters in the book) with H. Rider Haggard's "King Solomon's Mines"; "The Last Camel" seems at times to be a homage to Haggard.” The story is told by Amelia Peabody Emerson “who travels like Alexander the Great but writes like Jane Austen, or sometimes the Brontes”. The author’s “wonderfully witty voice and her penchant for history lessons of the Nile” keep people reading about the “delightful Emersons”. Further, ”Egyptian verisimilitude is one of Elizabeth Peters's strong points; she is, after all, a traveler and Egyptologist herself.”[1]

Awards

The novel was nominated for an Agatha Award in the "Best Novel" category in 1992.[6]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 Theroux, Peter (20 October 1991). "Crime/Mystery; It All Started With Reginald Forthright". Section 7. The New York Times. p. 34. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  2. Grape, Jan (24 October 2011). "What's Up Doc?". SleuthSayers. Retrieved 9 March 2012.
  3. "The Last Camel Died at Noon Elizabeth Peters". Publishers Weekly. September 1991. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  4. Miss Eliza (22 June 2011). "Book Review - Elizabeth Peters' The Last Camel Died at Noon". Strange and Random Happenstance. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  5. Albright, Nathan (18 April 2019). "Book Review The Last Camel Died at Noon (Amelia Peabody #6)". Edge Induced Cohesion. Retrieved 21 March 2023.
  6. "Malice Domestic Convention - Bethesda, MD". Malice Domestic. August 23, 1988. Archived from the original on April 12, 2010. Retrieved March 9, 2012.
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