For most readers, an exciting book contains an explorer, a historical perspective, some secrets, elements of truth and an amazing discovery of some sort. Many others like a bit of intrigue, maybe a few love scenes and still others like to have a murder mystery or two or three thrown in the mix. Then, of course, there’s the sci-fi group of readers who have unearthly list of favorite aspects to a good book.
A new book by Joyce Morgan and Conrad Walters titled, Journeys on the Silk Road offers a bit of intrigue, travels across deserts and mountains, covers hardships and challenges and all with a sci-fi-type ending with the discovery of a cave filled with scrolls and the world’s oldest book.
Aurel Stein is the central figure of this historical account. Stein was a Hungarian-born scholar and archaeologist employed by the British service. His determination to travel across treacherous deserts on camels as well as completing some of his journey by boat and train is at the heart of the story. He endured numerous problems including frostbite.
His journey led him to a Chinese monk who helped Stein enter a hidden cave in 1900. The cave was “piled from floor to ceiling, undisturbed for a thousand years” with scrolls. One of the most important finds inside the cave was the Diamond Sutra of AD 868.
The printed book was made 500 years before the Gutenberg printing press was invented. Inside the pages of the Diamond Sutra were key Buddhist teachings.
The authors write about theories as to why the items were stored in the cave. “Scholars agree the cave was plastered shut around the beginning of the eleventh century, but the reasons why remain unclear.”
There were theories of protecting the contents from Islamic invaders. Stein had his own theory. “But there is also support for Stein’s other thesis, that the cave was a storeroom or tomb for material no longer needed by local monasteries.”







Article comments
1 - Dr. Joseph S. Maresca
These archeology finds may be worth investigating more fully.