The Museum Detective
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
This gripping series debut introduces whip-smart Pakistani archaeologist Dr. Gul Delani, whose investigation into the discovery of a mummy gets complicated—and personal—when it collides with her years-long search for a missing family member. This gritty crime thriller inspired by a real-life antiquities scandal is perfect for fans of Sue Grafton and Elsa Hart.
In the large, diverse, and densely populated city of Karachi, a young girl can vanish and never be found. This, Dr. Gul Delani understands well: It’s been three years since her niece, Mahnaz, went missing, and the investigation has been called off. Gul does her best to distract herself through work—she is a talented and trusted archaeologist and museum curator, Pakistan’s preeminent Egyptologist—but try as she may to keep her mind on the ancient past, somehow the thought of Mahnaz always sneaks back in.
When Gul receives a call in the middle of the night from the Sindh police, she thinks they may finally have an answer. Instead, Gul is summoned to a narcotics investigation in a remote desert region, many hours away. There, in a cave, they find a mummy—intact, seemingly authentic, its sarcophagus decorated with symbols from the ancient city of Persepolis. Gul is astonished. If it’s a genuine archaeological discovery, it will rewrite history.
Taking matters into her own hands, Gul will stop at nothing to authenticate the mummy—even as her quest brings her into the throes of a black-market scramble and a high-level conspiracy—and at last, just maybe, to the truth of what happened to Mahnaz, however difficult it is to face.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
An Egyptologist stumbles into the criminal underworld in this high-energy thriller from financial journalist Phillips (The Curse of Mohenjodaro). Pakistani museum curator Gulfsa "Gul" Delani is awakened one morning by a phone call from the police, who summon her to the province of Balochistan to help identify a mummy seized during a narcotics raid. The challenge excites Gul, given that mummification is not typically part of Islamic burial traditions. She concludes that the mummy dates back to the ancient Persian empire of Persepolis, and is likely the body of one of King Xerxes's lost daughters. The discovery kicks up political furor, and after the mummy disappears from the museum where Gul was studying it, Gul gets mixed up with a drug lord who pulls strings at every level in the chaotic city of Karachi. Then Gul learns that the body did not belong a Persian princess at all, and may, in fact, be the mummified remains of someone close to her. With the help of a band of street urchins and her wealthy but estranged family, Gul attempts to uncover the truth and dole out justice. Phillips's pacing is brisk, and she peppers the action with plenty of well-timed plot twists. Readers will hope to hear more from Gul soon.