This sequel to Scota’s Harp asks the reader to re-examine the true location of the Battle of Troy as well as the mythical continent of Atlantis. Scottish customs and songs become the template for knowing about the “Sea People” who attacked Egypt during the reign of Ramses III at the end of the Bronze Age. Within these pages the reader will be taken on a journey to the Bronze Age and the true voyage of Ulysses.
Our story begins in ancient Egypt, around 353 BCE, where a beautiful, red-haired, harp-playing princess is faced with a dilemma: Should she bow to custom and marry her own father, the pharaoh Nekhtenebef, or take a vow of chastity and spend her life as a temple priestess?
Enter a twist of fate, which sends our heroine, princess Scota Nefaru-Selkis, on an amazing adventure east up the Mediterranean and then north to Spain and, eventually, Ireland and Scotland. Scota brings with her a fabulous stone, on which she sits in her role as Queen of the new lands, and which has magical and mystical ties to her Egyptian heritage.
Enter a twist of fate, which sends our heroine, princess Scota Nefaru-Selkis, on an amazing adventure east up the Mediterranean and then north to Spain and, eventually, Ireland and Scotland. Scota brings with her a fabulous stone, on which she sits in her role as Queen of the new lands, and which has magical and mystical ties to her Egyptian heritage.