Life couldnt be worse for archaeology grad student Jim Hunt. Having lost his funding at a major midwestern university, and his partner, he desperately needs a breakthrough to revitalize his work and his life. Could a summer dig in map-dot Lyons, Kansas, jumpstart his fledgling career? Out of options, he packs his bags.
Five hundred years earlier, Spanish conquistador Francisco Vásquez de Coronado faces a desperate journey of his own through New World terrain. He must find the legendary golden city of Quivira. But can he trust the mysterious Turk, his Indian guide?
Jim and Coronados stories interweave in The Dig, intersecting at a fateful point.
Things dont improve for Jim with his first steps in Lyonsand his trespass upon an ancient mausoleum. His curiosity angers the localsincluding Eva, a striking but no-nonsense museum worker Jim is instantly drawn to. A local tough, Mitch Keeperenforcer for a reclusive, wealthy landownerseems to go out of his way to harass Jim. The sheriff thinks nothing of throwing him in jail. And then the seemingly innocuous dig turns deadly.
Its not much better for the conquistador. After days of wandering through dusty lands with no food or water, Coronado and his men are dying. Still, the Turk beckons them on. To continue means death. But to return empty-handed is equally unbearable . . .
Sheldon Russell ratchets the tension and mystery in both narratives as Jim and Coronado close in onor are eluded bywhat they seek. Along the way, the authors research and craftsmanship shine through. Coronados carefully rendered, formal speech contrasts with the casual dialogue authentic to the plains today. Even minor characters, from Stufflebaum, Lyonss prankster taxidermist, to the inscrutable Turk leap from the page. A historical fiction thrill ride that builds to an Indiana Jonesstyle standoff, The Dig forces its charactersand readersto grapple with an age-old proverb: all that glitters is not gold.
Genre: Historical
Five hundred years earlier, Spanish conquistador Francisco Vásquez de Coronado faces a desperate journey of his own through New World terrain. He must find the legendary golden city of Quivira. But can he trust the mysterious Turk, his Indian guide?
Jim and Coronados stories interweave in The Dig, intersecting at a fateful point.
Things dont improve for Jim with his first steps in Lyonsand his trespass upon an ancient mausoleum. His curiosity angers the localsincluding Eva, a striking but no-nonsense museum worker Jim is instantly drawn to. A local tough, Mitch Keeperenforcer for a reclusive, wealthy landownerseems to go out of his way to harass Jim. The sheriff thinks nothing of throwing him in jail. And then the seemingly innocuous dig turns deadly.
Its not much better for the conquistador. After days of wandering through dusty lands with no food or water, Coronado and his men are dying. Still, the Turk beckons them on. To continue means death. But to return empty-handed is equally unbearable . . .
Sheldon Russell ratchets the tension and mystery in both narratives as Jim and Coronado close in onor are eluded bywhat they seek. Along the way, the authors research and craftsmanship shine through. Coronados carefully rendered, formal speech contrasts with the casual dialogue authentic to the plains today. Even minor characters, from Stufflebaum, Lyonss prankster taxidermist, to the inscrutable Turk leap from the page. A historical fiction thrill ride that builds to an Indiana Jonesstyle standoff, The Dig forces its charactersand readersto grapple with an age-old proverb: all that glitters is not gold.
Genre: Historical
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