Usually, when I pick up mythology books, I aim to pick up straightforward guides. This, on the other hand, is a travel guide featuring mythology. Starting at Aswan, the author goes up the Nile, major site by site, to show off the ruins and the mythological significance of the places. You get to find out what stories take place at these locations, as well as stories about the gods of the temples you’d find.
This really does feel a bit like a travel guide. It certainly makes ME want to go on a tour up the Nile. At the end of every chapter there’s a timeline with the major events there, and a list of places a tourist might want to visit. And not all of those sites are ancient Egyptian! Some are Coptic Christian, or from after the Arab Conquest. There are some references and jokes about what you’ll find there in modern day too.
There are bits of humor throughout, so it isn’t dry reading. The out-of-orderness of it (because it’s going by sites, rather than any chronological, historical, or obvious mythological order) can be a bit disorienting, I guess, but I think it’s overall a pretty good mythological handbook, and if you’re interested in world mythologies, you’ll find stuff to like here.