Details
Envoy of Morpheus
CHF 4.00 |
|
Verlag: | Sama Publishing House |
Format: | EPUB |
Veröffentl.: | 05.07.2024 |
ISBN/EAN: | 9784997202968 |
Sprache: | Arabisch |
Anzahl Seiten: | 171 |
Dieses eBook enthält ein Wasserzeichen.
Beschreibungen
The novel talks about an archaeological discovery in an ancient Pharaonic city called "Khammun," which contains a winged hourglass. After research, it becomes clear that the symbol has a relationship to the Greek god Morpheus, and the events of the novel continue.
The story began in Upper Egypt, in the city of Ashmunin in Minya, with an amazing archaeological discovery, the temple of the god Thoth, and an hourglass pendant of non-Egyptian origins. The thing is, it doesn't seem to belong to this time period. A journalist named Bassem makes his way into the sacred chambers and takes some pictures, angering the archaeologist responsible for the excavation, Dr. Mustafa. The specialist professor cannot explain this revelation, but Bassem goes online and finds literary references to the symbol in question that contradict conventional knowledge, and unpacks the whole matter in an article.
Shortly after the mystery is revealed, a friendly Scotsman announces himself, contacts Bassem and is able to obtain a pass to enter the antiquities gallery to take a look at the mysterious hourglass. You'll immediately suspect that Richard is working for someone and wants to get the artifact. Only then does the gates of hell break loose, with the appearance of another group trying to steal the symbol for their own apocalyptic machinations.
"The Greek Papyri: The Envoy of Morpheus" by Ahmed Salah Al Mahdi, a writer, translator, and critic. He graduated from the Faculty of Arts, Department of Arabic Language, Cairo University. He is an author, critic, and translator. He specializes in fantasy and science fiction literature. He has published four novels: "Reem," "Salat: City of Resurrection," "Black Winter," and "The Greek Papyrus: The Emissary of Morpheus," in addition to the children's story "The Brave Rabbit."
The book was published by Dar Sama for Publishing and Distribution.
The story began in Upper Egypt, in the city of Ashmunin in Minya, with an amazing archaeological discovery, the temple of the god Thoth, and an hourglass pendant of non-Egyptian origins. The thing is, it doesn't seem to belong to this time period. A journalist named Bassem makes his way into the sacred chambers and takes some pictures, angering the archaeologist responsible for the excavation, Dr. Mustafa. The specialist professor cannot explain this revelation, but Bassem goes online and finds literary references to the symbol in question that contradict conventional knowledge, and unpacks the whole matter in an article.
Shortly after the mystery is revealed, a friendly Scotsman announces himself, contacts Bassem and is able to obtain a pass to enter the antiquities gallery to take a look at the mysterious hourglass. You'll immediately suspect that Richard is working for someone and wants to get the artifact. Only then does the gates of hell break loose, with the appearance of another group trying to steal the symbol for their own apocalyptic machinations.
"The Greek Papyri: The Envoy of Morpheus" by Ahmed Salah Al Mahdi, a writer, translator, and critic. He graduated from the Faculty of Arts, Department of Arabic Language, Cairo University. He is an author, critic, and translator. He specializes in fantasy and science fiction literature. He has published four novels: "Reem," "Salat: City of Resurrection," "Black Winter," and "The Greek Papyrus: The Emissary of Morpheus," in addition to the children's story "The Brave Rabbit."
The book was published by Dar Sama for Publishing and Distribution.