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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)
Eight hundred years ago, Anasazi War Chief Browser knew that an evil had haunted his village for generations. But he had no idea how deep that evil ran until he stumbled into a subterranean ceremonial chamber and onto a secret that filled him with dread.
In modern day New Mexico, archaeologist William "Dusty" Stewart finds himself puzzled by his latest excavation. He has no choice but to call upon the skills of his arch nemesis: world-renowned Canadian physical anthropologist, Dr. Maureen Cole. What Dusty and Maureen discover about this mysterious site catapults them deep into the investigation of an ancient crime-one that defined an entire civilization.
This memorable novel of the vanished Anasazi, the second in the series (following The Visitant), provides sober ecological lessons for our own civilization. The Gears, who are also collaborators on the First North Americans series, tell the brutal story of one 13th-century tribe, the Katsinas' People, as they tumble down the path that leads to the sudden disappearance of the Anasazi. In parallel, the authors also tell the tale of a team of contemporary archeologists and anthropologists excavating the ancient site that bears witness to the Anasazi tragedy. The earlier-set narrative follows the fortunes of the Katsinas' People, led by Matron Flame Carrier and War Chief Browser. The tribe is already reeling from the effects of enemy attacks and attrition on the many small pueblos that dot northwestern New Mexico. While the external threat is bad enough, Flame Carrier and Browser must also contend with a serial murderer within the tribe. In the present, archeologist Dusty Stewart and anthropologist Maureen Cole each have their own intimate links to this past. As they excavate, those links and the fate of the puebloans become clearer. Their new novel is not for the squeamish, but the Gears offer unusual insight into Anasazi culture and history, while in an afterword, they suggest that it may already be too late for us to escape a fate similar to that of the Anasazi. An extensive bibliography bolsters their argument. (July) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|
More Reviews and RecommendationsKathleen O'Neal Gear is a former state historian and archaeologist for Wyoming, Kansas, and Nebraska for the U.S. Department of the Interior. She has twice received the federal government's Special Achievement Award for "outstanding management" of our nation's cultural heritage.
W. Michael Gear, who holds a master's degree in archaeology, has worked as a professional archaeologist since 1978. He is currently principal investigator for Wind River Archaeological Consultants.
The Gears, whose First North American Series hit the international and USA Today bestseller lists, live in Thermopolis, Wyoming.
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January 23, 2008: The Summoning God By: Kathleen O?Neal Gear and Michael Gear Utterly interesting story about the past of an Indian Tribe called the katsinas. Finding for the truth of what is trying to get ride of them, or even yet kill them for their beliefs. A murder of mystery and belief through the eyes of one brave war chief called Browser. He could only find what wanted him or be haunted. The truth for him is more painstaking for the others. While it also goes to the future it reveals what they find almost similar ways in archaeology. What they find is how the killer uses a method to kill more than horrifying way possible imagined. I love how War Chief Browser fond out the killer was closer than he imagined from his tribe. He also found a bloody place were their were headless body?s all over the kiva floor. Also the witch called ?Two Hearts? how trap?s souls in a jar and puts a hole in the back of the Head. Darkness prevails this world or Two Hearts. The crazy tribal leader who has solved crimes before know who the killer is.
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July 08, 2003: An ancient Anasazi profiler with insight into serial killer psychology? erm..