Shadows on the Nile

Shadows on the Nile

by Kate Furnivall
Shadows on the Nile

Shadows on the Nile

by Kate Furnivall

eBook

$5.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK Devices and the free NOOK Apps.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

1912 London. Jessie Kenton hears her young brother, Georgie, scream in the middle of the night and wakes up the next morning to find him gone. Her parents never speak of him again.

1932. Twenty years later, Jessie is haunted by the same nightmare. Her other brother, Timothy, has inexplicably vanished from her parents’ home. Wracked by guilt because of her failure to ever find Georgie, and convinced that the two events must be related, she sets out on a quest to find Timothy. She plunges into a mysterious world of séances and mystics, nebulous clues and Egyptian artifacts.

With the help of a dashing and impoverished aristocrat, Sir Montague Chamford, Jessie follows the trail into the alien, swirling sands of the Egyptian desert. Amid the ancient intrigue and blistering heat, a powerful romance sparks between Jessie and Monty. But they must first confront the demons of Jessie’s past—and reveal the dark secrets that threaten not only Timothy’s life but theirs as well.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781101609873
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 10/01/2013
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 448
Sales rank: 1,017,662
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Kate Furnivall was born in Wales and currently lives in Devon, England. Married and the mother of two sons, she has worked in publishing and television advertising. She is the national bestselling author of The White Pearl, The Jewel of St. Petersburg, The Girl from Junchow, The Red Scarf, and The Russian Concubine.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

Praise for the novels of Kate Furnivall

“Gripping, elegant, and fierce.”—Library Journal

“An engrossing read on many levels.”—Publishers Weekly

“An admirable work of historical fiction.”—Minneapolis Star Tribune

"A wonderfully evocative tale."—Sun

"One of the year’s best reads.”—Booklist

Reading Group Guide

INTRODUCTION

London, 1932. Jessica Kenton, twenty-seven, thinks she has her life firmly under control, but it is torn apart when she learns that her brother, Timothy, a renowned young Egyptologist with the British Museum, has inexplicably vanished. Twenty years earlier, during a night that still haunts her, Jessie's adored brother Georgie also disappeared. Driven by her childhood guilt at never having found him, she sets off on a quest to track down her second missing sibling. She is helped in her search by clues left in mysterious places-clues based on the beloved stories of Sherlock Holmes, whose novels she shared with both of her lost brothers when they were young. And the clues convince her, in the face of evidence to the contrary, that Tim must still be alive.

Desperate to solve the mystery of his disappearance, she decides to travel to Egypt, accompanied by a dashing, if impoverished, aristocrat. But in this strange and alien place of dust and desert, Jessie also falls helplessly, deeply in love-and as her defenses are stripped away, she is forced to face the demons that drive her.


ABOUT KATE FURNIVALL

Kate Furnivall was born in Wales, has worked in publishing and TV advertising, and now lives by the sea in Devon, England, with her husband, with whom she has two sons. This is her sixth novel.


DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes books play a prominent role in Shadows on the Nile. When Tim took Jessie to the British Museum, she said, "Lead on, my intimate friend and associate." How is this Sherlock Holmes quote a theme for the book? How are the stories of Sherlock Holmes a catalyst for the plot development?
  • Timothy Kenton's girlfriend tells Jessie that her brother considers her his uraeus, the cobra on a pharaoh's headdress to protect him from harm. How is Jessie Tim's protector? Are there other protectors in the story?
  • Shadows on the Nile is set in 1932. Would the story be different if it took place in the present day? If so, how?
  • Jessie and Monty witness a riot in London protesting the Means Test. Fareed and his men are rebelling against British colonialism in Egypt. How is Jessie caught in the middle of both rebellions? How does each affect the plot?
  • When Jessie finds out that Tim is missing, she thinks, "You have no idea what my brother means to me. You have no idea that losing Timothy is like losing part of myself." Is there anyone in your life who you would risk your life to save? Why do you think Jessie feels so strongly, and how does it affect her actions? Discuss.
  • How are parent-child relationships portrayed in Shadows on the Nile? Sibling relationships?
  • Why do you think the author chose to include chapters from Georgie's point of view? How does this make the book different than if it had all been in an objective voice?
  • At the end of the book the reader discovers that Georgie believes he needs to earn back Jessie's love. Why do you think he feels this way?
  • Would you describe this book as a historical romance, a mystery, or both? Which genre do you think is most relevant? Why?
  • Jessie's mother says about Georgie, "That boy is incapable of love." Do you agree or disagree? Why?
  • From the B&N Reads Blog

    Customer Reviews