First published anonymously in 1827, The Mummy! imagines a twenty-second-century England unsettled by the revival of Cheops, an ancient Egyptian king whose presence exposes the follies of modern politics, science, and social ambition. Blending Gothic resurrection with speculative invention, social satire, and proto-science fiction, the novel anticipates later futuristic romance through its air travel, mechanical conveniences, and debates about monarchy, reform, and technological progress. Its exuberant style moves between melodrama and intellectual comedy, placing it in dialogue with Mary Shelley while retaining a distinctly comic, reformist energy. Jane C. Loudon, born Jane Webb, wrote the novel while still young and in financial difficulty after her father's death. Her evident curiosity about scientific discovery, public affairs, and the possibilities of technological change shaped a work unusually bold for its moment. She later became celebrated as a popularizer of horticulture, but The Mummy! reveals the imaginative breadth that preceded that career. This book is recommended to readers interested in early science fiction, women's writing, Gothic afterlives, and nineteenth-century political satire. It is both entertaining and historically important: a strange, witty, and ambitious novel that enlarges our understanding of speculative literature's origins.