Toby Wilkinson earned a degree in Egyptology from the University of Cambridge, and is the recipient of several prestigious awards given in his field. He has published nine books, and received the Hessell-Tiltman Prize for his previous book, The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt. He has appeared on radio and television as an expert on ancient Egyptian civilization and is a member of the international editorial board of the Journal of Egyptian History. Since 2003, he has been a Fellow at Clare College, University of Cambridge. He lives in Suffolk, England.
www.tobywilkinson.net
"Fascinating. . . . Compelling. . . . The Nile emerges as potent as ever, the sole bringer of life to Egypt." --The Guardian (London)
"First-rate. . . . The Nile and the history it has engendered still manage to stir something in all of us." --The Daily Beast
"Impressive. . . . Hugely entertaining. . . . Wilkinson's book is bound to reawaken the joys of armchair traveling." --Richmond Times-Dispatch
"Tell[s] the entire layered story of Egyptian civilization. Wilkinson deftly mingles ancient lore from the Pharaonic past with tales of 19th-century tomb robbers and contemporary clashes between the competing imperatives to develop and preserve sites along the riverbanks." --The Christian Science Monitor
"Masterful. . . . Thoroughly enjoyable and gloriously catholic." --The Times (London)
"Dexterously done and rich in detail. . . . This is infectious stuff that should surely inspire its readers to a fresh bout of Egyptian adventures." --The Telegraph (London)
"In this felucca voyage of the Nile, you see all of its history and you are constantly reminded that Egypt is also a living nation of today. . . . [Wilkinson] has done for popularizing this land what Michio Kaku and DeGrasse Tyson have done for astronomy and physics." --The New York Journal of Books
"[A] gently meandering tour of the Nile River in the company of a deeply knowledgeable guide. . . . To understand the cataclysmic changes gripping Egypt at the moment, eminent British Egyptologist Wilkinson urges a return to the heart of the country, the Nile, the source of the country's economy, spiritual beliefs and political structure." --Kirkus Reviews