| "Red Land, Black Land" by Barbara Mertz<br>Reviewed by Hmt. Rev. Tamara Siuda (AUS)
|
"Red Land, Black Land:
Daily Life in Ancient Egypt"
by Barbara Mertz
Peter Bedrick Books, 1966 original; revised/reprinted 1978 and 1990.
ISBN: 0-87226-222-7
One of my biggest disappointments getting into the Egyptological community (though, it
can be safely said, there really may not be such a thing) was that a number of otherwise
very good books went quickly out of date because of the pace at which we learn new things
about Egypt; the second was the seeming lack of any females in the field. Barbara Mertz is
one of the first female Egyptologists one comes across in the literature; some of you
probably already know her without even having picked up a scholarly work through the
Amelia Peabody mysteries she has written over the years under a pen-name. Mertz has two
Egyptological books to her name, the abovementioned Red Land, Black Land and
another called Temples, Tombs, and Hieroglyphs. As I have yet to crack open the
second, I will review the first.
Red Land, Black Land is engaging, thoughtful, and not a difficult read, even
though it is as scholarly as the next Egyptological treatise. I believe Mertz went out of
her way to make her subject, which was answering the question "how did the ancient
Egyptians live?" engaging, and succeeded in doing so. She tells stories alongside her
factual representations and fleshes out even the most enigmatic of topics as best known at
the time of the writing.
I adore Mertz's matter-of-fact, sometimes tongue-in-cheek tone; to read a scholar
commenting on the subject of the color of ancient Egyptian skin, for example, that
"It doesn't really matter if Queen Ti was blond or black or spotted with purple polka
dots" is refreshing in a world where everyone trips over each other racing for the
politically-correct position. Additionally, she is not afraid to admit to her own (and
other Egyptologists') biases, and to remind the reader that "there is nothing more
destructive of objective scholarship than a pet theory." While on the whole I find
this book a wonderful addition to "beginner" or "mass market"
audiences, I did find some trouble spots that a good editor and an updated version could
easily remedy. The book was revised once in 1978, but the currently in print version is
not updated from that point (so technically, the writing is nearly 20 years old). In
addition to the new facts that could be gleaned from a 90s re-edition, the book contains
several easily-fixed factual errors, such as the reversed attributions of Heru (Horus) and
Set to Upper and Lower Egypt; and a place in which Mertz refers to the Nubians as
"Medjay" (correctly) on one page, yet two pages later states that the Medjay
were of Libyan descent.
This is the sort of book that would really benefit from continuous update; and I think
Mertz is well-established as a writer who could do it. The obvious answer to filling in
the blanks left by this current outdated edition is to read more recent books in tandem
with works like Red Land, Black Land, but people do not always look at the
publication date on a book, or bother to read more than superficially, and this is a
significant drawback. Read this book -- read books in its ample bibliography -- and add it
to your knowledge along with books that are less than 20 years old. And then, you can sit
back and hope, like I do, that further editions will be forthcoming.

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