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FINAL REPORT
An Archaeologist Excavates His Past
Michael D. Coe
"A moving autobiography, an exciting account of the rediscovery of vanished civilizations, and unforgettable
portraits of the argumentative archaeologists who made those rediscoveries. Enjoy!" Jared Diamond
For more than four decades, Michael Coe has been at the forefront of American
archaeology. His research on the Olmecs and the Maya has had a decisive effect
on the way we think about Mesoamerican culture, and his acclaimed books
have introduced archaeology to a popular audience. Now, in an act of
personal excavation, Michael Coe looks back on a remarkably diverse life.
For one whose life's work meant overturning many previously held
assumptions about the past, Coe's early years were quite traditionally
American.The Coes were a well-to-do Long Island family, and Michael was
born to a privileged lifestyle. He was an indifferent student in college, and
it took some time before he settled on archaeologytime that was occupied
by a stint in the CIA, stationed on the China coast and in Taiwan, and travels
to Thailand and Sri Lanka.
Beginning in 1955, when Coe entered the Graduate School of Harvard
University, he committed himself to the civilizations of ancient America. He
worked on the front line of a generation of archaeological discovery, research,
and interpretation that has profoundly altered and enhanced our vision of
ancient Mesoamerica. His quest to penetrate archaeological puzzles and
mysteries has led him on some extraordinary adventures: digging in remote
Guatemala in grueling conditions; investigating, dating, and defining the
little-known Olmec culture.
Coe has always had plenty of enthusiasm to sparefor his wife, Sophie, and
five children, and the dilapidated Massachusetts farmhouse that they restored;
for art collecting; for fly fishing (an obsession that has taken him from the
tropics to Siberia); and for travelto Russia under Brezhnev, to Angkor Wat
after the Khmer Rouge. Now, with the publication of his memoirs, the general
public will recognize what his colleagues have always known: here is a man of
brilliance, humor, and charm, who has lived his life as an ebullient adventure.
Michael D. Coe is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Curator Emeritus in the Peabody Museum of Natural History
at Yale University.
ALSO BY MICHAEL D. COE:
Breaking the Maya Code
The Maya
Mexico
Reading the Maya Glyphs
The True History of Chocolate
ISBN 0-500-05143-7
· 61/4" x 91/2"
· 41 illustrations · 224 pages · BIOGRAPHY / ARCHAEOLOGY
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