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The Mesopotamian Riddle

An Archaeologist, a Soldier, a Clergyman, and the Race to Decipher the World's Oldest Writing

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0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 16 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 16 weeks
A rollicking adventure starring three free-spirited Victorians on a twenty-year quest to decipher cuneiform, the oldest writing in the worldfrom the New York Times bestselling author of The Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu.
It was one of history's great vanishing acts.

Around 3,400 BCE—as humans were gathering in complex urban settlements—a scribe in the mud-walled city-state of Uruk picked up a reed stylus to press tiny symbols into clay. For three millennia, wedge shape cuneiform script would record the military conquests, scientific discoveries, and epic literature of the great Mesopotamian kingdoms of Sumer, Assyria, and Babylon and of Persia's mighty Achaemenid Empire, along with precious minutiae about everyday life in the cradle of civilization. And then...the meaning of the characters was lost.

London, 1857. In an era obsessed with human progress, mysterious palaces emerging from the desert sands had captured the Victorian public's imagination. Yet Europe's best philologists struggled to decipher the bizarre inscriptions excavators were digging up.

Enter a swashbuckling archaeologist, a suave British military officer turned diplomat, and a cloistered Irish rector, all vying for glory in a race to decipher this script that would enable them to peek farther back into human history than ever before.

From the ruins of Persepolis to lawless outposts of the crumbling Ottoman Empire, The Mesopotamian Riddle whisks you on a wild adventure through the golden age of archaeology in an epic quest to understand our past.
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    • Booklist

      December 1, 2024
      For about three thousand years, a written language, cuneiform, recorded the history of Mesopotamia--the land between the Tigris and Euphrates rivers--on clay tablets. And then, several centuries before the beginning of the Christian Era, the language just sort of . . . disappeared. Papyrus supplanted clay as the favored medium for writing, and with papyrus came new languages. Flash forward to the mid-1800s, an age of exploration and pushing the boundaries of human knowledge. In 1847, three men became determined to bring this long-dead language back to life. Like The Riddle of the Labyrinth by Margalit Fox (about the decoding of the ancient Linear B text), this is an absolutely riveting story about the journey to uncover a part of human history that had been dead and buried for centuries. Hammer makes this true story as exciting as any work of fiction; this is no dry recitation of events, but a lively, suspense-filled story of adventurers and their quest to be the first to unlock the hidden rooms of history. Quite simply a wonderful book.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from January 1, 2025
      Three self-taught Victorians accomplish one of the most spectacular feats of 19th-century scholarship. Readers who enjoyed the fictional adventures of Indiana Jones might imagine that real-life archeologists aren't so exciting, but journalist Hammer, author ofThe Bad-Ass Librarians of Timbuktu, may change their minds. Over centuries, he writes, European travelers, soldiers, and diplomats puttered about ruins, dotting the deserts and mountains of the Middle East, puzzling at masses of wedge-shaped "cuneiform" script carved into bricks, clay tablets, relics, palace walls, cliffs, and mountainsides. Electrified by the 1820s' deciphering of Egyptian hieroglyphs, the public clamored to learn what this even older writing revealed. Hammer's heroes worked their magic from the 1830s to the 1850s. All (unlike Indiana) were amateurs: Austen Henry Layard, a bored law clerk who sought adventure and transformed himself into the world's most celebrated archeologist; Henry Creswicke Rawlinson, a military officer in the East India Company with a flair for languages; and Edward Hincks, an overworked Irish country parson who never traveled east but became brilliant at translating ancient texts. With a generous cast of supporting characters, Hammer alternates between the crumbling Ottoman Empire's lawless deserts and mountains, where Layard and Rawlinson unearthed monuments, palaces, and thousands of inscribed artifacts, and Europe, where scholars and enthusiasts (including Hammer's three subjects) toiled, quarreled, theorized, and cheated to decipher not one but at least a dozen ancient scripts. As a bonus, Hammer delivers a modest but comprehensible primer on cuneiform linguistics. By 1860, to the cheers of an attentive media, the problems were largely solved; Layard and Rawlinson lived long and honored lives; Hincks merely lived long, although he seems to be undergoing long-delayed recognition. An archeological triumph receives the history it deserves.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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