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The twentieth book in the series, "The Painted Queen", which will cover the 1912-3 season was in the editing phase at Peters' death is set to be realized around mid-2016.[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amelia_Peabody_series]]
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Misuse. It\'s Genre Savvy, not just \"savvy\".


* GenreSavvy: By the second or third book, Abdullah is learning to be resigned to the fact that dead bodies always show up around the Emersons' dig sites. A few books after ''that'', and everyone has picked up his "Every year, another dead body" line.
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Tropes cannot be subverted \"heavily.\" This is cruft.


* AdventureArchaeologist: Both Amelia and Emerson, though in heavily subverted form. They despise the treasure-hunting kind of archaeologist.

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* AdventureArchaeologist: Both Amelia and Emerson, though in heavily subverted form. They despise the treasure-hunting kind of archaeologist.
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* CyanidePill: In ''Lion in the Valley'', one of Sethos's men is captured by Amelia, and takes poison (prussic acid) rather than be questioned.
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A historical mystery series written by Elizabeth Peters.
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Added a trope.

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* OnlyKnownByTheirNickname: Nobody ever calls Ramses "Walter".
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* MindlinkMates: Ramses and Nefret have a one-way link, whereby Nefret knows when Ramses is in imminent danger.

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* MindlinkMates: Ramses and Nefret have a one-way link, whereby Nefret knows when Ramses is in imminent danger.danger (which is most of the time).
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* Nefret Forth is the only child of an archeologist who died discovering a LostWorld oasis where a remnant of ancient Egyptian civilization lingers. This was Peters' ShoutOut to the various lost worlds of Creator/HRiderHaggard, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, and Creator/ArthurConanDoyle. Nefret was adopted by the Emersons and went through a long time when ''she'' thought her relationship to Ramses was LikeBrotherAndSister, while Ramses pined in silence. Nefret is just as strong-willed and intelligent as her husband and in-laws, and rich and beautiful to boot. And a doctor.

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* Nefret Forth is the only child of an archeologist who died discovering a LostWorld oasis where a remnant of ancient Egyptian civilization lingers. This was Peters' ShoutOut to the various lost worlds of Creator/HRiderHaggard, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, and Creator/ArthurConanDoyle. Nefret was adopted by the Emersons and went through a long time when ''she'' thought her relationship to Ramses was LikeBrotherAndSister, while Ramses pined in silence. Nefret is just as strong-willed and intelligent as her husband and in-laws, and rich and beautiful to boot. And a doctor.
Medical Doctor.
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The Amelia Peabody series starts in the VictorianBritain but runs through WorldWarOne and into TheRoaringTwenties, so far. Over this time, she and her husband have founded a BadassFamily and QuirkyHousehold, the Emersons, that is the core of a bi-ethnic (English/Egyptian) example of TheClan. In addition to Peabody and Emerson, the Emerson family includes:

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The Amelia Peabody series starts in the VictorianBritain but runs through WorldWarOne UsefulNotes/WorldWarOne and into TheRoaringTwenties, so far. Over this time, she and her husband have founded a BadassFamily and QuirkyHousehold, the Emersons, that is the core of a bi-ethnic (English/Egyptian) example of TheClan. In addition to Peabody and Emerson, the Emerson family includes:



** Elizabeth Peters is a ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' fan. One of the WorldWarI-era stories had [[spoiler:Sethos pretending to be]] a German agent reporting to a "von Überwald."

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** Elizabeth Peters is a ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' fan. One of the WorldWarI-era UsefulNotes/WorldWarI-era stories had [[spoiler:Sethos pretending to be]] a German agent reporting to a "von Überwald."
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* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The Emersons have several friends who fit this class. Howard Carter, who found the tomb of Tutankhamun, appears a lot, and T. E. Lawrence (LawrenceOfArabia) shows up at least twice. Emerson has a particular dislike for fellow Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, possibly because Petrie is the RealWorld model for Emerson and the fellow who in Real History developed many of the archaeological principles and techniques Amelia credits Emerson with devising.

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* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The Emersons have several friends who fit this class. Howard Carter, who found the tomb of Tutankhamun, appears a lot, and T. E. Lawrence (LawrenceOfArabia) shows up at least twice. Emerson has a particular dislike for fellow Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, possibly because Petrie is the RealWorld RealLife model for Emerson and the fellow who in Real History developed many of the archaeological principles and techniques Amelia credits Emerson with devising.

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* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The Emersons have several friends who fit this class. Howard Carter, who found the tomb of Tutankhamun, appears a lot, and T. E. Lawrence (LawrenceOfArabia) shows up at least twice. Emerson has a particular dislike for fellow Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, possibly because Petrie is the fellow who in Real History developed many of the archaeological principles and techniques Amelia credits Emerson with devising.

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* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The Emersons have several friends who fit this class. Howard Carter, who found the tomb of Tutankhamun, appears a lot, and T. E. Lawrence (LawrenceOfArabia) shows up at least twice. Emerson has a particular dislike for fellow Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, possibly because Petrie is the RealWorld model for Emerson and the fellow who in Real History developed many of the archaeological principles and techniques Amelia credits Emerson with devising.


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* KidDetective: Ramses, in the earlier books.
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* ActionGirl: Amelia and Nefret, before they graduated to Action Moms.
* ActionHero: Emerson and Ramses. In the later novels, Ramses usually gets beaten up at least once a book.
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* LadyOfAdventure: Amelia.

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* LadyOfAdventure: Amelia. Nefret and Margret Minton are, too, though not in Amelia's league.
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* HeroesWantRedheads: Nefret. When her hair isn't described as "golden," most characters seem to agree it's ''red-gold.''

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* HeroesWantRedheads: Nefret. When her hair isn't described as "golden," most characters seem to agree it's ''red-gold.'' "red-gold."
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* HeroesWantRedheads: Nefret. When her hair aren't described as "golden," most characters seem to agree they're more red than blonde.

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* HeroesWantRedheads: Nefret. When her hair aren't isn't described as "golden," most characters seem to agree they're more red than blonde. it's ''red-gold.''
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The Amelia Peabody series starts in the VictorianBritain but runs through WorldWarOne and into TheRoaringTwenties, so far. Over this time, she and her husband have founded a QuirkyHousehold, the Emersons, that is the core of a bi-ethnic (English/Egyptian) example of TheClan. In addition to Peabody and Emerson, the Emerson family includes:

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The Amelia Peabody series starts in the VictorianBritain but runs through WorldWarOne and into TheRoaringTwenties, so far. Over this time, she and her husband have founded a BadassFamily and QuirkyHousehold, the Emersons, that is the core of a bi-ethnic (English/Egyptian) example of TheClan. In addition to Peabody and Emerson, the Emerson family includes:
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* CanonWelding: With Peters' VickyBliss series (one of the characters in that series is descended from one of Ramses and Nefret's children).

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* CanonWelding: With Peters' VickyBliss Literature/VickyBliss series (one of the characters in that series is descended from one of Ramses and Nefret's children).
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* CanonWelding: With Peters' Vicky Bliss series (one of the characters in that series is descended from one of Ramses and Nefret's children).

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* CanonWelding: With Peters' Vicky Bliss VickyBliss series (one of the characters in that series is descended from one of Ramses and Nefret's children).
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* {{Berserker}}: Harm to her husband or son will turn prim, petite Amelia into one of these. Watch out for the parasol.

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* {{Berserker}}: TheBerserker: Harm to her husband or son will turn prim, petite Amelia into one of these. Watch out for the parasol.
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* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Amelia and Evelyn in the first book.

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* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Amelia and Evelyn in the first book. By the time Evelyn re-appears as a major character, it's obvious they did learn from each other, - for instance, Amelia, who was utterly disinterested in all but the most utilitarian clothes at the beginning now can talk fashion with the best of them, and Evelyn is thrilled about wearing bloomers and bicycle dresses.
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* HeroesWantRedheads: Nefret. When her hair aren't described as "golden," most characters seem to agree they're more red than blonde.
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* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: As noted in HistoricalDomainCharacter, Emerson clearly is an (embellished up to 11) version of RealLife Flinders Petrie.

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* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: As noted in HistoricalDomainCharacter, Emerson and Peabody clearly is an (embellished up to 11) version are versions of RealLife Flinders Petrie. Petrie and his friend and patron Amelia Edwards, embellished up to 11 and married to each other.
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* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: As noted in HistoricalDomainCharacter, Emerson was clearly inspired by the RealLife Flinders Petrie.

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* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: As noted in HistoricalDomainCharacter, Emerson was clearly inspired by the is an (embellished up to 11) version of RealLife Flinders Petrie.
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* VeryLooselyBasedOnATrueStory: As noted in HistoricalDomainCharacter, Emerson was clearly inspired by the RealLife Flinders Petrie.
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* ScoobyDooHoax: Unsurprisingly, considering the setting, some form of this is always used by someone, protagonists included.

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* ScoobyDooHoax: Unsurprisingly, considering the setting, some form of this is always used by someone, [[StartXToStopX protagonists included.]]
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ScoobyDooHoax: Unsurprisingly, considering the setting, some form of this is always used by someone, protagonists included.

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* ScoobyDooHoax: Unsurprisingly, considering the setting, some form of this is always used by someone, protagonists included.
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ScoobyDooHoax: Unsurprisingly, considering the setting, some form of this is always used by someone, protagonists included.
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* SpiritedYoungLady: Amelia (loosely; she appears to have been in her late twenties or even her early thirties when the series begins). Later on, Nefret.

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* SpiritedYoungLady: Amelia (loosely; she appears to have been in her late twenties or even her early thirties says she's 32 when the series begins). Later on, Nefret.
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* TomboyAndGirlyGirl: Amelia and Evelyn in the first book.
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Amelia Peabody and her husband Radcliffe Emerson are a HappilyMarried BattleCouple who are Victorian Egyptologists. Each is an AdventurerArchaeologist (subverted; they have plenty of adventures, but nothing but scorn for treasure-hunting-style archeology) and an AmateurSleuth. They also exhibit the tropes HugeGuyTinyGirl, SlapSlapKiss (they are sparring partners as well as passionate lovers), MamaBear and PapaWolf, CasualDangerDialog, ParasolOfPain, and LiteraryAgentHypothesis (the whole series is supposedly being extracted by an editor from Amelia's private journal and a "Manuscript H" giving a third-person account of the experiences of Ramses and occasionally Nefret; see below).

They also have a tendency to consider themselves [[ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight above the law]], although mostly this only means they don't bother to call the police while battling criminals: they're administering justice as they see it, so why waste time talking to the police? (There's also the problem that the British police won't bother about Egyptian matters and the Egyptian police are often incapable.) Amelia, in fact, is generally scornful of cops, ignoring the fact that police must follow rules of evidence she doesn't consider binding on her. She frequently says UsefulNotes/ScotlandYard would solve more cases if a woman ran it -- not talking about getting ''both'' male and female perspectives, but about ''replacing'' the male way of thinking with the female.

The Amelia Peabody series starts in the VictorianBritain but runs through WorldWarOne and into TheRoaringTwenties, so far. Over this time, she and her husband have founded a QuirkyHousehold, the Emersons, that is the core of a bi-ethnic (English/Egyptian) example of TheClan. In addition to Peabody and Emerson, the Emerson family includes:

* Their son, Walter "Ramses" Emerson, who appears in the second book as a KidDetective which he remains until he's a TeenGenius (in both archeology and undercover work), going on to be a spy in WWI, then to marry Nefret Forth (see next) after a period as an UnluckyChildhoodFriend, passing through a WillTheyOrWontThey to emerge as a VictoriousChildhoodFriend. He and Nefret are MindlinkMates and form a second BattleCouple.

* Nefret Forth is the only child of an archeologist who died discovering a LostWorld oasis where a remnant of ancient Egyptian civilization lingers. This was Peters' ShoutOut to the various lost worlds of Creator/HRiderHaggard, Creator/EdgarRiceBurroughs, and Creator/ArthurConanDoyle. Nefret was adopted by the Emersons and went through a long time when ''she'' thought her relationship to Ramses was LikeBrotherAndSister, while Ramses pined in silence. Nefret is just as strong-willed and intelligent as her husband and in-laws, and rich and beautiful to boot. And a doctor.

Each of these four main characters has an Egyptian nickname, bestowed on them by the locals, a particular interest within Egyptology, and an edge of some kind that makes them a bit super-normal:

* Amelia is "Sitt Hakim" ("Lady Doctor") (She is also called "Peabody" by her husband; she always calls him "Emerson." If he calls her Amelia, it means [[YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious he's really angry with her]].) Her favorite topic is pyramids. Her edge is the dreams [[spoiler: of or from her dead friend Abdullah.]]

* Emerson is "Father of Curses," earned by his short temper and talent with Arabic invective. His favorite topics are tombs and temples. His edge is sheer strength and even more endurance.

* Ramses is "Brother of Demons" (Of course, "Ramses" is already a nickname; his real name is "Walter.") His favorite topic is inscriptions and the study of the ancient Egyptian language. His edge is his extraordinarily sharp hearing and vision. "The Brother of Demons can hear a whisper across the Nile."

* Nefret is "Nur Misur" ("Light of Egypt"), probably in tribute to the philanthropy she does. Her favorite topic is mummies, which chimes well with her medical degree. Her edge is a psychic link with Ramses that lets her know when he is in imminent danger; it also spills out into a general sympathy that lets her tame horses, dogs, and cats, feed sparrows from her hand at a cafe table, and may be another reason for her widespread popularity with the Egyptian poor.

There is quite a bit of CatchPhrase use, mostly from Amelia, who also loves aphorisms. Her favorite catch phrases include "We must have a Council of War!" at least once a case, and frequent references to making or consulting "one of my little lists" of clues. She often has "the direst of forebodings" and the rest of the family sometimes use the phrase for their own misgivings, quoting her. "I suspected him from the start!" is another of her favorites -- Ramses once remarked that this was meaningless because she suspected ''everyone.'' Perhaps the most often used is Amelia's claim, "I had, of course, considered that / thought of that / anticipated that" or the like. It runs neck-and-neck, though, with "another shirt ruined" (since Emerson and Ramses are both very hard on their clothes; in fact, there used to be a web-site for Amelia with that phrase as the title) and Abdullah's lament, "Every year, another dead body."

The main characters complicate their investigations for themselves by (1) sometimes competing to see who can solve it first, and (2) almost always keeping information from each other to protect the others from rushing into the danger that they themselves feel must be investigated. As a result, they spend a lot of time rescuing each other.

There are a great many repeating characters, including many historical archeologists. Among the important supporting characters are:

* Sethos, [[spoiler:Seth Emerson, who would be an EvilUncle if he were actually evil; he is Emerson's bastard half-brother, starts the series as a professional tomb robber, gets a crush on Amelia, who reforms him, and goes on to become a British secret agent, all before he reveals the relationship to Peabody and Emerson, and]] who has a way of turning up unannounced, to drag in new plot complications.

* Abdullah ibn Hassan al Wahhab, their foreman on the digs. [[spoiler:He eventually dies defending Amelia, but continues to appear to her in dreams, the reality of which cannot be checked.]] His son Selim takes over from him eventually. His brother Daoud is a GentleGiant. His grandson David is taken in by the Emersons, becomes a famed illustrator, and marries a niece of theirs. His daughter-in-law Fatima becomes the Emerson's housekeeper. Abdullah's family is the hook on which to hang issues of racism and imperialism, which the Emersons are fiercely against.

The Emersons, both female and male, are also fierce proponents of equal rights for women. Some of the stories touch on the early feminist movement in England, and Amelia and Nefret are always trying to improve the lot of Egyptian women.

The Emersons' career is intertwined in [[ShownTheirWork the real history of Egypt and Egyptian archeology]]. The latest books put them on the outskirts of Carter's discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamen.

The Amelia Peabody books so far, with the dates when they are set, are:
# 1884-85, Crocodile on the Sandbank (1975)
# 1892-93, Curse of the Pharaohs (1981)
# 1894-95, The Mummy Case (1985)
# 1895-96, Lion in the Valley (1986)
# Summer 1896, Deeds of the Disturber (1988)
# 1897-98, The Last Camel Died at Noon (1991)
# 1898-99, The Snake, the Crocodile, and the Dog (1992)
# 1899-1900, The Hippopotamus Pool (1996)
# 1903-04, Seeing a Large Cat (1997)
# 1906-07, Valley of the Kings, The Ape Who Guards the Balance (1998)
# 1907-08, Guardian of the Horizon (2004, published out of sequence)
# Summer-Fall 1910, A River in the Sky (2010, published out of sequence)
# 1911-12, The Falcon at the Portal (1999)
# 1914-15, He Shall Thunder in the Sky (2000)
# 1915-16, Lord of the Silent (2001)
# 1916-17, The Golden One (2002)
# 1919-20, Children of the Storm (2003)
# 1922-23, The Serpent on the Crown (2005)
# 1922-23, Tomb of the Golden Bird (2006)

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!!Tropes featured include:
* ActionMom: Amelia, as well as her daughter-in-law Nefret.
* AdventureArchaeologist: Both Amelia and Emerson, though in heavily subverted form. They despise the treasure-hunting kind of archaeologist.
* AffablyEvil: Sethos lives and breathes this trope.
* AmateurSleuth: Amelia and Emerson, and later Ramses and Nefret.
* AmnesiacLover: This happens to Emerson at one point.
* ApronMatron: Amelia's parasol is a weapon feared throughout Egypt (''before'' her husband gave her a sword-cane version), and senior British officials cringe at the thought of her tongue-lashings.
* BadassFamily: The Peabody-Emerson family, not forgetting the Egyptian in-laws.
* BadassGrandpa (and Grandma): Amelia and Emerson, by the later books.
* BattleButler: Gargary. The rest of the staff is pretty handy in a fight too.
* {{Berserker}}: Harm to her husband or son will turn prim, petite Amelia into one of these. Watch out for the parasol.
* BetaCouple: Several - David and Lia, Cyrus and Catherine, Walter and Evelyn, Sethos and Margaret, Daoud and Kadija.
* CanonWelding: With Peters' Vicky Bliss series (one of the characters in that series is descended from one of Ramses and Nefret's children).
* CannotSpitItOut: Amelia's companion Evelyn and Emerson's brother Walter in ''Crocodile on the Sandbank.'' Amelia eventually gets so fed-up with both of them that she spits it out for Evelyn:
-->'''Amelia''': She loves someone else...The one she loves is a poor wretch who won't even declare himself.
-->'''Walter''': You cannot mean...
-->'''Amelia''': Yes, you fool. She loves you. I don't know why, but she does. Now go and claim her.
** Not to mention Ramses, for almost ten years.
* CatsAreMean: Nefret's cat, Horus, is a demon incarnate to everyone but Nefret and Sennia.
* CatsAreSnarkers: The long line of Emerson cats all manage this without talking.
* ChildProdigy: Ramses, to an insufferable degree.
* ChildhoodFriendRomance: Amelia and Emerson intend Ramses and Nefret to be (adoptive) brother and sister, but Ramses never saw it that way. But he won't tell Nefret until he has some indication she feels the same. After a great deal of angst on his part, Nefret eventually comes around.
* TheClan: The Peabody-Emersons, eventually. In the chronologically last book (so far), their friends the Vandergelt family become linked to them by marriage as well ([[spoiler:David's cousin Jumana agrees to marry Cyrus' adopted son Bertie]]).
* CoveredInMud: In ''The Curse of the Pharaohs'', Amelia's son Ramses interrupts a tea party after having gone digging in the compost heap and getting covered in mud (among other things). Ramses is described as not so much leaving muddy footprints as having a stream of filth trailing behind him.
* CutlassBetweenTheTeeth: Discussed; Amelia regrets that it's [[RealityEnsues not actually possible]].
-->"That has always struck me as an impractical procedure," I said. "One would have to have extremely hard teeth and strong jaw muscles, and even then an involuntary movement might easily result in the loss of teeth and jaw."
* DeadPersonConversation: Amelia has had at least one [[TalkingInYourDreams dream-conversation]] with her deceased friend [[spoiler:Abdullah]] in each novel [[spoiler:since his death]]. They are cryptic enough that they do not interfere with fair play in the detection, but she believes them to be genuine.
* DisappearedDad: And husband. [[spoiler: Sethos]] isn't very good at this kind of thing. Actually he's very good at the 'disappeared' part...
* DownerEnding: Not usually, but ''Falcon at the Portal'' did not end on a happy note.
* DudeShesLikeInAComa: In ''Crocodile on a Sandbank'', Amelia comes out of a swoon to feel herself being tenderly held and kissed by her not-yet-husband Emerson with whom she has a SlapSlapKiss relationship going. Not only is she totally fine with it, she shams unconsciousness for a few more minutes to prolong the moment!
* ExactWords: All of the Emersons, especially Amelia, tend to use these rather than outright lies when dissembling (including to each other).
* TheExoticDetective: The basis of the series.
* FakingTheDead; [[spoiler: Sethos.]] ''Twice.''
--->'''Emerson''': "If he dies again I am going to kill him!"
* FlirtyStepsiblings: Ramses and Nefret.
* FriendlyEnemy: After a certain point, Amelia and Sethos' relationship is mostly this. (Emerson isn't so complacent.)
* GeniusBruiser: Emerson, described by his wife as "Herculean" and also as "the greatest archeologist of this or any other age."
* GenreSavvy: By the second or third book, Abdullah is learning to be resigned to the fact that dead bodies always show up around the Emersons' dig sites. A few books after ''that'', and everyone has picked up his "Every year, another dead body" line.
* GoGoEnslavement: Amelia is forced to dress in a sexy harem costume by the BigBad of ''Lion in the Valley''. Of course she dons it over her 'combinations' (long underwear) meaning the effect is not quite as intended. Even so Emerson's first words to her are "Put some clothes on!"
* HappilyMarried: Amelia and Emerson.
* HeelFaceTurn: [[spoiler: Sethos]].
* HeroicSacrifice: [[spoiler: Abdullah.]] And Sethos [[spoiler: ''twice''!]]
* HistoricalDomainCharacter: The Emersons have several friends who fit this class. Howard Carter, who found the tomb of Tutankhamun, appears a lot, and T. E. Lawrence (LawrenceOfArabia) shows up at least twice. Emerson has a particular dislike for fellow Egyptologist Flinders Petrie, possibly because Petrie is the fellow who in Real History developed many of the archaeological principles and techniques Amelia credits Emerson with devising.
* HypocriticalHumor: At one point in ''The Last Camel Died at Noon'', Amelia pats herself on the back for nagging her husband into a certain course of action. When it goes badly a few pages later, she notes that if he'd listened to her, he would never have taken that course. Apparently, she forgot to [[{{Retcon}} edit]] the relevant portion of [[LiteraryAgentHypothesis her journal]].
** Emerson does this all the time too. You'll lose track of how many times he tells someone (especially Amelia) not to lose their temper, despite the fact that his own has earned him the nickname "Father of Curses" and everyone in Egypt is afraid to cross him.
* LadyOfAdventure: Amelia.
* LiteraryAgentHypothesis: Not only are the books presented as being extracts from the journals and letters of the family, the issue is made even blurrier because both Margret Minton and Percy Peabody (secondary characters) write highly colored and distorted "memoirs" of their experiences, and the Emersons are semi-friends with a yellow journalist who writes exaggerated accounts of their own exploits.
* LoveEpiphany: When Nefret ''finally'' realized how she felt about Ramses, the sound she made is described as half squeak, half sob.
* LoyalAnimalCompanion: Bastet, for Ramses. She's also pretty intelligent for a cat.
* MasterOfDisguise: Sethos and Ramses both. Ramses, in fact, developed his own skill at disguise while still a young boy, after stealing one of Sethos' rather comprehensive makeup kits; for a while before puberty he was in the habit of disguising himself so convincingly as a girl that the Emersons' servants thought they were being haunted by a child's ghost.
* MightyWhitey: Both used and subverted. Amelia and her husband, son, daughter-in-law, and grandchildren are all white, and regarded with awe, admiration, and dread by the Egyptians they work with, but one of the causes they champion is equal rights for Egyptians, and they cultivate some impressive Egyptian sidekicks (though none in their own league). In ''The Last Camel Died at Noon'', Amelia and family visit a LostWorld, where Amelia is irritated to discover that the heroic native prince believes in the Mighty Whitey trope.
* MindlinkMates: Ramses and Nefret have a one-way link, whereby Nefret knows when Ramses is in imminent danger.
* MrSmith: A recurring character is a British spymaster who often goes by "Smith," partly because spies use pseudonyms and partly because it's so much easier than coping with his real name of "the Honorable Algernon Bracegirdle-Boisdragon."
* NotNowKiddo: Happens to Ramses, particularly in ''Lion in the Valley''.
* PapaWolf: Emerson. Shades into OverprotectiveDad with regard to Nefret sometimes; not so much about sex as about shielding her from the world's ugliness. He'll say she shouldn't be permitted to examine a gruesome corpse, ignoring the fact that she's a fully trained doctor ''and'' would politely and lovingly tell him where to stuff his objections. At least once after she and Ramses married, Ramses got a bit irritated by Emerson's attitude effectively implying that Ramses didn't do a proper job of looking after her; he was rather maliciously amused when Emerson became embarrassed to realize Nefret was taking a bath in the next room.
* SesquipedalianLoquaciousness: Ramses does this a lot as a child; he eventually grows out of it. Alas, his son inherits it.
* ShoutOut: To Literature/SherlockHolmes -- the second book has characters belonging to a different branch of the Baskerville family, and someone under the pseudonym of Milverton, as well as a direct reference to Holmes, while book four has Amelia meet a detective named Tobias Gregson [[spoiler: who's not actually either of those things]]. There are also references to Creator/HRiderHaggard's stories, in addition to the {{Homage}} mentioned above involving Nefret's backstory.
** Elizabeth Peters is a ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' fan. One of the WorldWarI-era stories had [[spoiler:Sethos pretending to be]] a German agent reporting to a "von Überwald."
* ShownTheirWork: The Egyptology and history of archeology is solid, because Elizabeth Peters (IRL Barbara Mertz) is an Egyptologist and writes non-fiction under her real name.
* SpiritedYoungLady: Amelia (loosely; she appears to have been in her late twenties or even her early thirties when the series begins). Later on, Nefret.
* TheyDo: Ramses and Nefret, eventually.
* UntoUsASonAndDaughterAreBorn: Ramses and Nefret's children.
* VictorianLondon: The series starts in this period, but outlives it by quite a bit.
* YouCalledMeXItMustBeSerious: Amelia knows Emerson's really angry at her when he calls her "Amelia" rather than the usual "Peabody."

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