The Mummy!; or a Tale of the Twenty-Second Century (1827) is a bold hybrid of Gothic romance, political satire, and proto-science fiction. Set in a technologically transformed future Britain, it imagines the revival of the Egyptian pharaoh Cheops by galvanic science, then uses his uncanny return to test modern assumptions about progress, monarchy, gender, and education. Loudon's brisk, inventive prose mingles melodrama with speculative extrapolation-steam-powered innovations, advanced agriculture, and social reform-placing the novel beside Mary Shelley's Frankenstein while anticipating Victorian futurism. Jane C. Loudon, born Jane Webb in 1807, wrote the novel while still very young and in precarious financial circumstances after her father's death. Her interests in science, antiquity, and public reform shaped the book's unusual range; its imaginative technology reflects the era's fascination with electricity, Egyptology, and industrial change. The work also altered her life: John Claudius Loudon's admiring review led to their acquaintance and marriage, after which she became a major writer on botany and gardening. Readers interested in the origins of science fiction, women's literary history, or nineteenth-century debates about progress will find The Mummy! unexpectedly rich and lively. It rewards attention not merely as a curiosity, but as an ambitious speculative novel that turns resurrection into a critique of the future.