For anyone who ever wanted to be an archaeologist, Ian Graham
could be a hero. This lively memoir chronicles Graham's career as
the "last explorer" and a fierce advocate for the protection and
preservation of Maya sites and monuments across Mexico, Guatemala,
and Belize. It is also full of adventure and high society, for the
self-deprecating Graham traveled to remote lands such as
Afghanistan in wonderful company. He tells entertaining stories
about his encounters with a host of notables beginning with Rudyard
Kipling, a family friend from Graham's childhood.
Born in 1923 into an aristocratic family descended from Oliver
Cromwell, Ian Graham was educated at Winchester, Cambridge, and
Trinity College, Dublin. His career in Mesoamerican archaeology can
be said to have begun in 1959 when he turned south in his Rolls
Royce and began traveling through the Maya lowlands photographing
ruins. He has worked as an artist, cartographer, and photographer,
and has mapped and documented inscriptions at hundreds of Maya
sites, persevering under rugged field conditions. Graham is best
known as the founding director of the Corpus of Maya Hieroglyphic
Inscriptions Program at the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and
Ethnology, Harvard University. He was awarded a MacArthur
Foundation "genius grant" in 1981, and he remained the Maya Corpus
program director until his retirement in 2004.
Graham's careful recordings of Maya inscriptions are often
credited with making the deciphering of Maya hieroglyphics
possible. But it is the romance of his work and the graceful
conversational style of his writing that make this autobiography
must reading not just for Mayanists but for anyone with a taste for
the adventure of archaeology.
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