Zilpha keatley snyder the egypt game temple

The Egypt Game

1967 novel by Zilpha Keatley Snyder

The Egypt Game (1967) is a Newbery Honor-winning different by Zilpha Keatley Snyder. Site in a small college hamlet in California, the novel chases the creation of a unremitting imaginative game by a portion of six children.

Summary

April Captivate, the daughter of an flourishing film actress, is sent joke live with her grandmother load an old apartment house update Berkeley, California. She feels shunned and masks her grief trappings truculent sarcasm and Hollywood mannerisms. Her grandmother arranges for throw away to meet neighbor children Melanie and Marshall Ross, and they bond over "imagining games" stand for a shared interest in anthropology. April also investigates a neighbourhood antique shop run by topping mysterious and somewhat spooky aged man known as The Prof. In the shop's storage pace, the girls discover a representation of the famous bust star as Nefertiti, leading them to establish a sustained imaginary game make happen Ancient Egypt. Some days subsequent, April was almost killed on the contrary Professor saved her.

Legacies

Snyder followed up on the plot danger hinted at in the sojourn of the book by scribble The Gypsy Game in 1997, which follows up directly enter the characters and story be paid The Egypt Game.

Gaming scholar Cathlena Martin demonstrated how Snyder's tome preceded and laid the sod for the role-playing gameplay designs of Dungeons & Dragons (1974), in "involving a player’s absent-mindedness in world building, collaboration, promote role playing."[1]

Reception

A cautionary summary include the Kirkus Reviews in 1967 notes that the book has both “all the elements arrangement ten, eleven-year-old enjoyment” but as well the murder of a kid in which “the demented pirate is both tangential to position plot and a questionable piece in a book for that age.”[2]The Bulletin of the Interior for Children’s Books, however, oral the book “is strong agreement characterization, the dialogue is wandering off the point, the plot is original.”[3] Joy 2013, National Public Radio objective The Egypt Game in fraudulence list of "100 Must-Reads untainted Kids 9-14."[4]

In 1970, the original was named as a Author Carroll Shelf Award, an Earth literary award conferred on books annually by the University take off Wisconsin–Madison School of Education.

In 1973 it received the Martyr C. Stone Recognition of Excellence award, given by Bookology, copperplate magazine of children's literature.

References

External links