The Mayan calendar poses an interesting challenge to thinkers in the modern age. On one hand, it is one of the most complex and accurate astronomically-based calendars that we have found in mankind's historical record. And on the other, it predicts, according to some anthropologists and archaeologists, the end of time on December 21, 2012.
As always, humankind has very different responses to this date. Some claim it signals an apocalypse or Armageddon. Others say that it will bring a sea change to human consciousness. Still others say it will be just another day on Earth. I have to admit that I fall into the last category, though I'll be interested to see what happens in three years.
It was obvious that authors Chris Morton and Ceri Morton Thomas put a ton of hard work and research into their book 2012: The Secret of the Crystal Skull. And it provides yet another point of view on the subject. Their protagonist, Dr. Laura Shepherd, is an archaeologist with a specialty in Mayan hieroglyphics. When a colleague dies mysteriously in the possession of a strange crystal skull, Shepherd is put in charge of determining where it came from and what its significance may be.
Never has writing a report for a superior provided more of a winding path. Laura's path takes her to a hidden Mayan temple and into one of the most technologically advanced labs in the United States, not to mention her journey to what may be a parallel universe... But I won't spoil that spiritual quest for you.
Evidently this novel began as a screenplay that may have inspired Roland Emmerich to create his latest big budget disaster film - 2012. And the authors' previous best-seller (The Mystery of the Crystal Skulls) may have inspired the last Indiana Jones movie - Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. So they seem to have a knack for getting Hollywood's attention.
It reads like a screenplay a good portion of the time with a ton of visual detail. And though I enjoyed the second half of the book and found the last 200 pages to go extremely quickly, the first half was tough sledding and took a long time to get rolling.







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