Insurance vs Publishing

How many authors have started writing their first book while still maintaining a professional career or full-time job?

It’s no easy task, as the brain has to multi-task between each activity. Still, it will keep you sharp as you dig deeper into your subconscious, develop your characters and plot, and work on language skills to refine your work. So, it is most definitely a complementary hobby!

Maybe it’s not surprising that I made George Drake, the protagonist of Siptah’s Legacy and The League of the Sacred Ankh, an insurance broker seeking out a more adventurous life for himself before getting bogged down in the industry’s “rat race.” Other authors often use their professions as a backdrop to their publications, including lawyers, doctors, politicians, and indeed, all walks of life.

From what I have concluded, however, the world of publishing seems no different from that of our insurance ecosystem. There are plenty of sharks out there, and the old idioms of Caveat Emptor (“Let the buyer beware”) or Uberima Fides (“Utmost good faith”) all apply just as much.

If you consider the author a consumer, he needs to find a publishing house to underwrite his book. To intermediate, most publishing houses will only work through brokers, in this case, literary agents.

Like insurance, many ancillary providers help pave the way down this challenging path, including editorial services, creative experts, and even aggregators!

The only key difference is that the publishing arena can only be described in insurance terminology as an extremely “hard market.” Finding that underwriter who might be prepared to take on your risk is sometimes like finding that elusive “needle in a haystack.”

The consumer will, in the majority of circumstances, need to self-insure and self-publish until a broker eventually spots an opportunity to make a decent amount of commission from one of the underwriters prepared to publish the manuscript.

A bit of luck undoubtedly plays an essential part in the overall equation, and leveraging contacts and influencers can equally tip the balance.

As Churchill once said, “Success is not final, failure is not fatal, it is the courage to continue that counts!”

Valley of the Kings: The Heart of KV66

Few today will not have read or heard about the Valley of the Kings at some point in their lives. It’s not surprising that the Egyptians often refer to their homeland as Masr Om El Donya, which literally translates to “Egypt Mother of the World.”

One can clearly see the relevance of this statement from its long history, awe-inspiring monuments, and wealth of antiquities. Beautiful temples adorn Luxor and Thebes on the East Bank of the Nile. Majestic necropoli and tombs pave the way for the dead on the Westside, and most certainly, none will disappoint you.

This unique landscape made the perfect backdrop for Siptah’s Legacy, and for discovering a new tomb in what appears to be an unexplored valley just to the North West of the principal resting place of Egypt’s middle kingdom dynastic rulers.

The official name for the site in ancient times was The Great and Majestic Necropolis of the Millions of Years of the Pharaoh, Life, Strength, Health in The West of Thebes.

Valley of the Kings and El Qurn

El Qurn is the highest point in these Theban Hills located on the West Bank of the Nile right opposite Thebes. It has a Pyramidal Shape when viewed from the valley’s entrance and, it has often been hypothesized that this may have been the main reason behind the choice of this site by the ancient priests.

63 tombs have been excavated in the Valley of the Kings, with an additional 4 in the West Valley.

There are probably more tombs to be found, and to this day, the valley remains one of the most active archaeological sites in the world. If you haven’t had an opportunity of visiting this venerable site, it’s certainly worth adding to the bucket list!

The Oceanic White Tip Shark Makes a Fitting Assailant In Siptah’s Legacy

Shark attacks are very rare in the Red Sea, with last known attacks occurring back in 2010, when there were four incidents involving both an oceanic white tip as well as a mako. One of the reasons behind these incidents was the fact that tourists had inadvertently been luring them in through the illegal habit of hand-feeding fish while swimming on the reefs.

Renowned oceanographer Jacques Cousteau often described the oceanic white tip as the most dangerous of all species of shark. Though slow-moving, it is opportunistic and aggressive, and is reputed to be dangerous to shipwreck survivors.

After the USS Indianapolis was torpedoed on 30 July 1945, most sailors who survived the sinking reportedly died from exposure to the elements rather than from shark bites. However, according to survivor accounts published in several books about sharks and shark attacks, potentially hundreds of the Indianapolis crew were killed by sharks before a plane spotted them on the 5th day after the sinking.

Oceanic white tips are believed to have been responsible for most, if not all, of those attacks. Also during World War II, the RMS Nova Scotia, a steamship carrying about 1,000 people near South Africa, was sunk by a German submarine. One hundred and ninety-two people survived; many deaths were attributed to the white tip.

Oceanic white tips have been known to grow up to 4 meters (13 feet) (although more typically average 3 meters), so are formidable predators and fitting assailants in Siptah’s Legacy while our unsuspecting adventurers conduct a night dive on the Thistlgorm wreck several miles off the coast of the Red Sea resort of Sharm El Sheikh.

You’ll have to read the book to find out how it all turns out!

The Ultimate Dive Site of the Red Sea Provides an Interesting Twist in Siptah’s Legacy

The wreck of the SS Thistlegorm is widely acknowledged to be one of the world’s foremost diving attractions, although its location had been obfuscated until the early 1990’s.

The wreck was first discovered by a young Jacques Cousteau, who made a short film and documented it. Because he wanted to preserve the site as much as possible, he gave everyone the slip and deliberately registered the wrong coordinates.

She was built by Joseph Thompson and Sons of Sunderland and launched in 1940. The ‘Thistle’ trademark originated with her operator, the Albyn Shipping Line, who had a number of other vessels all carrying a thistle prefix.

In May 1941, she was loaded up with supplies for the Eighth Army and relief of Tobruk, as well as two sets of rolling stock for the Egyptian Railways Company. Unfortunately for her, as the Mediterranean was well under German control, she had to sail around the Cape of Good Hope and eventually to Suez, where she anchored in what was thought to be a safe place.

This wasn’t to be the case. Two German Heinkel bombers were dispatched from Cyprus to intercept what was perceived to be a large vessel, and one of them managed to discharge its payload on top of her, ripping out the bridge and one of the holds and catapulting the deck cargo into the sea.

It sank very quickly, and thirteen lives were lost. As the wreck sits upright with all her holds exposed, divers can still clearly see much of its cargo: armored vehicles, motorcycles, small arms, ammunition, shells, and so on. The midsection is where the bombs took their toll along the midsection. Scattered both on deck as well as on the sea floor are the remnants of the railway engine and tenders. It has often been described as a submerged army-surplus store… which, in effect, it was.

As exciting as the real history of this ill-fated ship may be, the dramatic events around the SS Thistlegorm found in the pages of Siptah’s Legacy are, of course, completely fictional!

The Magical Temple of Kom Ombo An Ideal Key Location for Siptah’s Legacy

Kom Ombo was an interesting choice of location for a couple of important scenes contained in Siptah’s Legacy. The temple actually dates to around the Ptolemic Dynasty (305 BCE ~ 30 BCE) during the time of Cleopatra, as opposed to the time frame of the novel, which starts off at the beginning of the Middle Kingdom, some 2000 years prior to that, but I took some creative license there, as this was, indeed, an important religious spot.

The temple complex is actually a twin structure dedicated principally to Sobek, the crocodile god of fertility, and also Horus. It is in a fairly ruined state and often overlooked by visitors, as tourists generally prefer to focus their time touring the great monuments of Luxor, not to mention drawing in the mystical essence of the famed Valley of the Kings.

The fact that this temple is relatively unknown, and includes a number of interesting elements, made it perfect to incorporate into the fictional environment of of my principal character, Hatshepsut, not to mention Siptah himself!

Hatshepsut was, of course, an accomplished doctor of medicine. If you look very carefully, carved within the walls of the magnificent Kom Ombo temple one can find a frieze containing what are clearly images of surgical instruments, as well as birthing positions… demonstrating how advanced the Egyptians were in medical sciences.

I also utilised the famed “Nilometer” located within the temple confines to conceal a 3,000-year-old secret (revealed in Siptah’s Legacy) and here again, applied a touch of artistic license to increase the depth of the structure and build within it a hidden underground tunnel that ultimately connects with the River Nile from the opening, guarded by a carved limestone crocodile colossus.

There you have it! One behind-the-scenes example of how the KV66 series incorporates real-world locales and archeological sites to bring the books to life. More to come!

Pre-Order Now! League of the Sacred Ankh: KV66 Volume Two

The next volume in the KV66 saga is now available to pre-order!

If you pre-order the Kindle edition of KV66: League of the Sacred Ankh now, it will appear automatically on your Kindle app or device on November 12, 2021. You can be among the first to experience the further adventures of George Drake and company!

About The League of the Sacred Ankh

Six months after uncovering the infamous KV66 tomb, British adventurer George Drake and his partners, Sherifa and Zoe, prepare to take the priceless relics on a world tour. With the addition of Jesse Barber now seconded from the British Museum, the foursome paves a new path as the League of the Sacred Ankh.

But dark forces conspire against them… and when one of their own is kidnapped and goes missing, it’s a race against time across Egypt to recover their friend before it’s too late…

Reversing the course charted in the first volume of the George Drake series, Siptah’s Legacy, the sequel begins at the team’s new home base at the Valley of the Kings before moving on to the bustling Egyptian capital, Cairo. From there, the daring crusades are taken to the beautiful yet remote Siwa Oasis deep in the Western Desert.

It was here that Alexander the Great had requested he be buried on his death, but ultimately his golden sarcophagus would never reach there, and is still yet to be discovered…

The story continues to the infamous WW2 battleground area of El-Alamein on the Northern Mediterranean coast, returns to Cairo, and finally finds our intrepid adventurers back in the United Kingdom for a final chapter, in which yet another conundrum emerges… to be addressed in the third volume, which I’m working on even now.

Have you already read the first book in the KV66 series? If not, get Siptah’s Legacy now, and you’ll be ready to go when League of the Sacred Ankh is released on November 12, 2021!

Read a Feature Article About the Making of the KV-66 Series

The Thursday, August 19, 2021 edition of The Khaleej Times includes an in-depth profile of yours truly, K. G. Maw, including the story of the long road to writing and publishing my first novel in the KV-66 series, Siptah’s Legacy.

The Khaleej Times is the longest-running English-language daily newspaper in the United Arab Emirates. I’m grateful to books and entertainment journalist Enid Grace Parker for the piece!

Read The Khaleej Times profile.

Have you read the first book in the KV-66 series? Get Siptah’s Legacy right now!

British Battles & Medals

Over the past decade, I collected a considerable number of British Campaign Medals and documented the complete collection on a separate website which is still active, spanning over 3 centuries of British military history across all parts of the globe. The medals which initially stimulated my growing interest in the subject started with those awarded to my Late Great Uncle Herbert Cambell Maw who was killed during the Natal Rebellion in 1906.

An extract recording his casualty can be found in “Light Horse Cavalcade 1899-1961” by Harry Klein & published in 1969 by Howard Timmins Quote “On May 13th the Transvaal Mounted Rifles (TMR) experienced their first casualty, when Trooper H.C. Maw while searching for his horse on the edge of the Kombe forest, was mortally wounded in a lone clash with a Zulu scouting party” Unquote.

Herbert was a son of Arthur Maw and was born in 1870 and lived at Severn House before heading out to South Africa and joining the Imperial Light Horse at the start of the Boer War (1899-1902)

Over a period of almost 10 years, the collection grew to well in excess of 100 medals with each one carefully researched and documented as far as practically possible.

For more information about each individual battle and a description of each  award, please visit the following website

https://natal1906.wordpress.com

 

 

 

 

KV 66 – Siptah’s Legacy now available in paperback!

After the initial soft launch of the digital / e-book version on 14th May, Siptah’s Legacy is now available in paperback through Amazon right across the world.

Product Description

  • ASIN : B095B3N1PD
  • Publisher : Independently published (May 17, 2021)
  • Language : English
  • Paperback : 330 pages
  • ISBN-13 : 979-8504080314
  • Item Weight : 15.8 ounces
  • Dimensions : 5.25 x 0.83 x 8 inches

Happy Reading!

 

The Maws of Severn House (now known as the Valley Hotel in Ironbridge)

In 1871 Severn House was occupied by Arthur Maw, who was aged 36 at the time, having been born in 1835. He was listed on the census as an encaustic tile manufacturer, employing some 180 men and women at their Ironbridge state of the art factory. Arthur’s father John Hornby Maw, was a surgical instrument manufacturer who made his fortune by the invention of the baby’s feeding bottle.

Arthur Maw was regarded as an authority on encaustic tiles, this being illustrated by his contribution of an article on encaustic tile manufacture for the ninth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica published in 1879.

Prestigious orders came to Maws as a result of participation in international exhibitions such as the Philadelphia Centennial Exhibition of 1876, the Paris Universal Exhibition of 1878 and 1889 and the Chicago Exhibition of 1893. In 1867 Maws were the first company to reproduce the celebrated transparent celest or turquoise blue of the ancient Chinese enamels. For the Paris exhibition of 1878 they produced an important novelty the “rediscovered” lustre-wares. This was to become an important part of their production and many of the vases produced by the company bore this form of decoration.

The Maws exhibit for the 1893 World Fair in Chicago was 38ft long by 15ft wide and 20ft high the shafts of the columns being 12ft high and was divided by screens into a bathroom, part of a church chancel an area showing decoration suitable for public buildings and a display area for pots and vases, each of which was tiled and decorated with Maws products 

Arthur Maw’s brother George lived in nearby Benthall Hall and was renowned for his knowledge about the crocus flower. He travelled all over the world and brought back samples. He also used to write letters to Charles Darwin about his theories on evolution.

At the height of the tile boom the company was producing over twenty million tiles and other items per  year, in 9,000 different designs and supplying countries all over the world. To help sell this phenomenal quantity of ceramic ware the company used lavishly printed catalogues which showed the total range of their products the majority of which were available in different colours to order.

More history about Severn House and it’s delightful setting within the Ironbridge Gorge can be found on the following link

Ref https://www.thevalleyhotel.co.uk/hotel-information/our-history