Xibalbá Gate: A Novel of the Ancient Maya
Autor Rob Swigarten Limba Engleză Paperback – 20 mai 2005
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780759108790
ISBN-10: 075910879X
Pagini: 305
Ilustrații: illustrations
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția AltaMira Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 075910879X
Pagini: 305
Ilustrații: illustrations
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția AltaMira Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
This is the best novel I have read in some time. And the Maya supernatural domain is accurately portrayed. Students of the Maya should fasten their seatbelts and hang on tight for this adventure, where two apparently separate worlds become fascinatingly less so. The novel requires attention to detail, and will reward the careful reader with exciting times.
The ruins of Classic Maya civilization exude mystery . . . and students respond by taking archaeology classes. Their enthusiasm tends to wane the more that dates, phases, and pottery types surface. The recent riot of Maya text translations that have exposed some of the more bizarre Maya behaviors have produced a resurgence of students' initial awe. Building on this new knowledge with the imagination of a mustang reigned in by scholarly integrity, Xibalbá Gate is a temple-sized shot of adrenalin in the guise of politically savvy kings, cunning courtiers, sinister court dwarfs, ever-resourceful sorcerers, mostly faithful - and ever superstitious - peasant farmers, and more, whose uniquely luxuriant religious shtick breathes vibrant life into the Classic Maya - so much so that the ancient Maya who are so distanced from us in time and space intrude themselves into every reader's contemporary life. Want your students to take on the material remains of the long-gone Maya seriously, intensely, and intimately? Assign Swigart's book. You'll hear a chorus chanting, "bring on the dates, phases, and pottery types!"
The author has combined the lively intrigue of a well-crafted novel with a distinctly 21st-century take on every archaeologist's fantasy. In this case, the fantasy time machine is cast as a computer simulation that takes readers-like the players in the book-deep into the lowland Maya world on the eve of the Classic "collapse." Like today's increasingly realistic computer games, the increasingly gripping narrative will capture students and faculty alike. And when the chills subside, will provide lots of opportunity and incentive for talking about events and conditions of the Terminal Classic.
Fortunately, for anyone who wants to gain an understanding of what the Maya were about AltaMira Press has given us Rob Swigart's Xibalbá Gate. . . . there is no better way for an interested amateur (and perhaps even professional) Mayanist to get a look at the Maya at the height of their glory just before the lights winked out in the central lowlands in the 9th century of the present era.
The ruins of Classic Maya civilization exude mystery . . . and students respond by taking archaeology classes. Their enthusiasm tends to wane the more that dates, phases, and pottery types surface. The recent riot of Maya text translations that have exposed some of the more bizarre Maya behaviors have produced a resurgence of students' initial awe. Building on this new knowledge with the imagination of a mustang reigned in by scholarly integrity, Xibalbá Gate is a temple-sized shot of adrenalin in the guise of politically savvy kings, cunning courtiers, sinister court dwarfs, ever-resourceful sorcerers, mostly faithful - and ever superstitious - peasant farmers, and more, whose uniquely luxuriant religious shtick breathes vibrant life into the Classic Maya - so much so that the ancient Maya who are so distanced from us in time and space intrude themselves into every reader's contemporary life. Want your students to take on the material remains of the long-gone Maya seriously, intensely, and intimately? Assign Swigart's book. You'll hear a chorus chanting, "bring on the dates, phases, and pottery types!"
The author has combined the lively intrigue of a well-crafted novel with a distinctly 21st-century take on every archaeologist's fantasy. In this case, the fantasy time machine is cast as a computer simulation that takes readers-like the players in the book-deep into the lowland Maya world on the eve of the Classic "collapse." Like today's increasingly realistic computer games, the increasingly gripping narrative will capture students and faculty alike. And when the chills subside, will provide lots of opportunity and incentive for talking about events and conditions of the Terminal Classic.
Fortunately, for anyone who wants to gain an understanding of what the Maya were about AltaMira Press has given us Rob Swigart's Xibalbá Gate. . . . there is no better way for an interested amateur (and perhaps even professional) Mayanist to get a look at the Maya at the height of their glory just before the lights winked out in the central lowlands in the 9th century of the present era.