Gollancz Fantasy Masterworks.
464 pages, paperback.
1984.

In 1811, a sect of Egyptian sorcerors set out to open the gates to the Ancient Egyptian realm of the dead in order to call back the old gods, vanquish Christianity, and resurrect magic. They failed, horribly, yet something happened that night.

1983: An American college teacher and literary scholar, who has specialised on the early 19th century, is asked by an eccentric billionaire to act as a guide to a group of time travellers. The billionaire, you see, both being a genious and having several of this specimen in his employment, has discovered that time is a river. A frozen river, where you have no choice but to float along with the current. However, some time, some where, some how, the ice has been breached. And with the right equipment, it is possible to travel between these gates, provided they are open. Which they’re only for a limited period at a time.

The college teacher accepts the ridiculous amounts of money he’s offered to go along with what it clearly the delusion of a madman, only to discover that the lunatic is telling the truth. However, he’s not able to savour the irony of this for very long, because obviously, something goes to Hell.

The word that immediately springs to mind when I want to describe The Anubis Gates, is “fun”. The characters are quirky, the plot threads and the story intertwined and serpentine, the age’s accurately portrayed, and the concept’s eccentric and well-executed enough for it to really stand out in the crowd. I mean, a novel with time travel, Egyptian sorcerors and gods, beggar kings and gangs, great British Romantic poets, melancholy, vengeance, insane plans, werewolves, and a London so filthy you could use Ankh-Morpork to clean it up with — how else to describe it, than fun?

Granted, the plot was a bit transparent, but that’s only (and I repeat: ONLY) because Powers obviously wants it to be. He drops a lot of hints to the reader along the way, so that you’ll be able to see what’s coming long before it hits the proverbial fan and gets the characters all messed up. This is done in such a way that rather than feel cheated and annoyed, I was left with a big stupid grin on my face for most of the time it took me to read this novel.

In the very least a strong 8.0/10.