Full disclosure here. Lucy Coats is a friend of mine. This basically means that a couple of years ago she told me she was writing a YA
novel about Cleopatra’s childhood and coming-of-age, set in a magical version
of Ancient Egypt where the gods really exist, and first of all I fell over with
jealousy-tinged admiration at the the sheer brilliance of the idea, and
afterwards I got to read some of the drafts, which were also brilliant. The first
book, ‘Cleo’, came out last year and the second, ‘Chosen’ has just been
published by Orchard. I love them both - and what luscious covers!
Though everyone has heard of Cleopatra the Queen, her
childhood remains a mystery. As Lucy says:
Nobody knows much about
Cleopatra’s path to the Pharoah’s throne, beyond the bare minimum of
speculative dates, and even those are disputed. Who her mother was, when
exactly she was born, what she really looked like are all mysteries. Her early
life is a big fat hole in history, which I have jumped into with both feet and
tried to fill.
Such lack of solid information may be infuriating to the
historian but for a writer it’s a gift beyond dreams, and the stuff of dreams
is exactly what Lucy has woven into these two splendid historical
fantasies. In ‘Cleo’ we first meet the
child Cleopatra in a crowded palace room, fighting back tears at her mother’s
deathbed. But this Cleopatra can see the gods themselves.
My mother opened her pale, bluish
lips slightly and sighed. Only I could see the misty golden ka soul form that
rose upwards from her body – a perfect mirror image of her mortal self. Only I
could see the door opening in the air, the tall jackal-headed figure stepping
from his reed boat and slipping into the mortal world. Only I could see his immortal hand stretching
out to draw my mother’s soul through and sail off with her to the underworld
realm. She held out her own hand to him
and didn’t even look back once.
Threatened with murder by her two half-sisters, Cleo escapes
from Alexandria with her best friend and slave-girl Charm, finds sanctuary in a
far-off temple of Isis and becomes a priestess. There she learns her beloved
goddess has plans for her. It’s up to Cleo to return to Alexandria, find a map
locating the ancient shrine of the goddess, wipe out the treachery of those who
betrayed her, and rescue Egypt from the evil god Am-Heh. Luckily Cleo has
allies. Not only Charm, but the handsome young Khai, whose dark eyes stir many
a heartbeat as Cleo grows into a warm-hearted, susceptible teenager. But not just any teen. Cleo may be as
flirtatious and funny as Louise Rennison’s Georgia Nicholson, but she’s also a
princess of Egypt, brave and ambitious, proud of her status and descent, royal
to her fingertips. Lucy Coats never
forgets the future fame of this young girl.
Throughout both books we find little hints of Shakespeare’s ‘Antony and
Cleopatra’ – Cleo’s maid Charm, for example, must be that very Charmian who ‘loves
long life better than figs’ but who (we know) one day will follow her mistress
into death. The friendship between the
two girls is as just as much if not more important than Cleo’s romantic interests – and
it will be lifelong.
In ‘Chosen’ (which if anything is an even better book than
the first), Cleo as ‘the Chosen One of Isis’ journeys through the deserts of
North Africa to the oracle at Siwah, and thence to Rome to bring back her
exiled father, sweep Berenice from the throne and destroy the evil Am-Heh. And
she meets a young Roman soldier called Marcus Antonius on the way…
What I love about Lucy’s version of Egypt is how rich,
colourful and intense it is, full of sounds, scents and warm breezes. In a
passage from ‘Cleo’, our sensual girl enjoys a massage after a temple dance:
The smell of rose-and-cinnamon
oil filled the warm air, and the thin coverlet lay heavy on my naked hips and
legs, almost too hot for this summer day. Through my half-closed eyes I could
see the black silhouettes of swallows, dipping and darting against the harsh
blue of the the early Akhet sky, hunting for airborne bugs over the Nile…
In ‘Chosen’, in more warlike mood, Cleo and her comrades
approach an oasis after a long and grimy desert march:
We rode up out of the black sand
in the heat of the afternoon and arrived at the oasis the desert tribes called
Shore of the Sea. …The camels started to run as they smelt the fresh water
… The green was intoxicating to my eyes,
and the smell of it almost an assault on my nostrils. I slid down from Lashes
as she dipped her muzzle in the water, snorting, shaking her lips and blowing
great clouds of bubbles as she slurped and sucked.
Total immersion in the past!
You can sense how much fun the author is having, and it’s infectious.
Quite simply, I enjoyed both books enormously. The two titles are suitable for
older children, perhaps from thirteen up. Lucy doesn’t flinch from the dark
side – there’s a fair bit of physical violence; you’ve got to be able to cope
with some characters being eaten by crocodiles, for example – as well as a
non-explicit, off-stage rape which is handled seriously but sensitively. However great the danger though, we can be
sure Cleo and her friends will win through, with the supernatural power of Isis
at their back and, leading from the front, Cleo herself, crackling with energy,
life, and determination to fulfill her destiny as one of the most famous Queens
who ever lived.
"CLEO" and "CHOSEN" by Lucy Coats are published by Orchard Books. You can find out more about Lucy and her books at her website, http://www.lucycoats.com/
Ooh, an Egypt with magic! Does the story veer from our history?
ReplyDeleteI once published a story by Christine Lucas, "What The Carp Saw..." in which the hero, a priest of Anubis, is trying to find the body of a murdered woman after her ring turns up in the fish he was going to have for dinner, so that she can have her afterlife. He and his cat enter the Otherworld to find the fish's soul and get the information. (This author loves cats) That was the only other piece of magical fiction I've read set in Egypt and the hero and his cat were such a delight! I simply had to buy it for that issue of the SF magazine I was helping to edit. Ancient Egypt would have been a pleasant, laid-back place to live in.
That sounds rather lovely, Sue! One other magical Egypt story I know is Rosemary Harris's trilogy 'The Moon In the Cloud', 'The Shadow on the Sun' and 'The Bright and Morning Star', set in the time of Noah. It memorably and charmingly begins like this:
ReplyDelete'At a time extremely long ago, the very time as it happened when the Lord God stirred and grumbled, 'They're all very bad down there except the Noahs, I'll have a flood,' the very humble ancestor of all circuses existed in the land now called Israel.'
The action soon moves to Egypt, however ... these are wonderful books.
They involve cats, too!
ReplyDeleteOh, yes, I'd forgotten that trilogy, though I haven't actually read them. Noah goes to Egypt to get a pair of cars for the Ark, yes?
ReplyDeleteCats, not cars.
ReplyDeleteThat's the one! :)
ReplyDeleteNot Noah, though - a young musician, Reuben.
ReplyDeleteThese books sound lovely - I've seen Cleo around before (with its very striking cover) but for some reason assumed it was the more realistic type of historical YA romance... however, your beautifully lyrical review and the mention of magic and ka souls (which appear in my Great Pyramid Robbery for younger readers) makes me want to read both of these immediately!!! Is it going to be a trilogy? Lucy? Please?
ReplyDeleteThese books sound good to me. To add to my reading list for sure.
ReplyDeleteBut what I really wanted to say was: v nice review of your new book in today's Guardian. "This wonderful book" ... Not bad eh? Congratulations.
Thankyou, Georgina! Not bad at all; I'm thrilled.
ReplyDelete