The Track Across the Desert

by Adrian McMinn


Formats

Softcover
$25.95
Hardcover
$51.95
E-Book
$7.95
Softcover
$25.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 8/07/2016

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9781514497142
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9781514497128
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9781514497135

About the Book

Kay, a young man has moved from the city to work in a regional centre. He lives in the countryside, in what was an abandoned 1950s house with a dog called Trail, and indulges his interest in an image of an Egyptian Princess from the Amarna period.

He creates a shrine to her on his fireplace mantle, and by his observations to it, Kay accidentally invites communication on with the Princess’ world of Egypt in 1350 BCE.

Time around Kay becomes unstable, and he finds himself waking in a forest near his house, with an enigmatic memory of a desert landscape, across which winds a track that leads to the City of Akhetaten, where the Princess lives.

In spite of this re-occurring dream, he falls in love with a waitress. He tricks himself into thinking he can walk to the princess’ city and return to love the waitress, but his solution on to reconcile his dream with reality proves glib.

Arriving in the city we find he is expected, called there, perhaps by the sorcery of a 9 year old black princess of Kush and the Egyptian an queen; however, their sorcery appears to have its own inherent instability.

Except for the authority of the sun, all parties involved in Kay’s adventure are misaligned, and they struggle to fulfil their original intentions.

After initially being arrested, Kay is given a tour of the city and encounters several notable people; the rebellious Princess of Kush, the humane Master of the Road, the outsider Chief of Police Mahu, and the haunted General Ramose.

He meets the princess of the shrine, and her sisters, and in the Mansion of the Aten, he experiences the sun-god.

Because Kay is dreaming, he cannot sleep and grows weaker, until a social catastrophe forces him to flee. Now he must discover what there is at the other end of the track across the desert.


About the Author

The author was born in Australia in the 1950s, graduated from school in 1970 and later from university. He lives in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Over the years, Egypt has been a favourite destination, and ‘The Track Across The Desert’ is an exercise in invention, a romantic homage to an eighteenth-dynasty sculpture of an Amarna Princess.