Review by Booklist Review
In this hilarious follow-up to T. Rex Time Machine (2018), the two intrepid time-traveling dinosaurs land in Egypt during Tutankhamen's reign, damaging a newly built pyramid in the process. After a rough start involving hot sand and snapping crocodiles, King Tut himself spots the dinosaurs, mistaking them for Sobek, the god of the Nile, and the mix-up results in a feast for the confused T. Rexes, along with a tour of ancient Egypt. Things get complicated, however, when visiting aliens recognize them from prehistoric times and threaten to blow their cover. The spirited story and clever quips will have readers laughing throughout, and the comic-book-style illustrations perfectly suit the punchy tone. The fun even continues with a story on the inside of the book jacket! While the implication that aliens are responsible for building the pyramids takes away from the ingenuity of ancient Egyptians, it's all in good fun, and the ending leaves room for what will hopefully be many more T. Rex time travels to come.--Emily Graham Copyright 2019 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
A feckless pair of time-traveling T. Rexes make a stopover in ancient Egypt.Between the burning-hot sands and the crocodile-infested river, it's shaping up to be a bummer of an outinguntil young Tut happens along and, mistaking one of the dinos for Sobek, god of the Nile, declares himself a fanboy. From then on it's all parties and feasting aboard the royal yacht, with tours of landmarks ranging from the Library of Alexandria ("And this is where I check out all your comic books") to the Sphinx ("a practical joke that got out of hand"). This goes on until, that is, the extraterrestrials who "come down every couple of weeks to work on that triangle project" catch sight of the opportunistic visitors and dash the divinity bit with some Cretaceous Era selfies. Uh oh, time to jump back into the time machine for a quick, random getaway. Next stop (as the final scene suggests) is definitely not Kansas. Chapman floats blocky figures of the voracious visitors, their diversely brown human hosts, and hairless blue ETs clad in uniforms strongly reminiscent of Star Trek's against very simple, often monochromatic backgrounds, leaving plenty of space for gags and banter. He also slips in an easter egg, having the real Sobek and archenemy Drought duke it out in a minicomic printed inside the dust jacket.A most excellent adventure, with more (Hint: Can you say "Aaarrrgh!"?) to come. (Picture book. 6-8) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.