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Deep Past

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

If nature could invent intelligence of our scale in a blink of geologic time, who's to say it hasn't been done before

A routine dig in Kazakhstan takes a radical turn for thirty-two-year-old anthropologist Claire Knowland when a stranger turns up at the site with a bizarre find from a remote section of the desolate Kazakh Steppe. Her initial skepticism of this mysterious discovery gives way to a realization that the find will shake the very foundations of our understanding of evolution and intelligence.

Corrupt politics of Kazakhstan force Claire to take reckless chances with the discovery. Among the allies she gathers in her fight to save herself and bring the discovery to light is Sergei Anachev, a brilliant but enigmatic Russian geologist who becomes her unlikely protector even as he deals with his own unknown crisis.

Ultimately, Claire finds herself fighting not just for the discovery and her academic reputation, but for her very life as great power conflicts engulf the unstable region and an unscrupulous oligarch attempts to take advantage of the chaos.

Drawing on Eugene Linden's celebrated nonfiction investigations into what makes humans different from other species, this international thriller mixes fact and the fantastical, the realities of academic politics, and high-stakes geopolitics—engaging the reader every step of the way.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 4, 2019
      Popular science author Linden (The Parrot’s Lament) makes his fiction debut with a fascinating thriller that asks the question: “If evolution could produce intelligence once, could it have produced it more than once?” The Delamain Foundation is funding research in Kazakhstan into how horses became domesticated. When the project head takes ill, American anthropologist Claire Knowland replaces him. Soon after her arrival, Rob Rebolet, head of security for Transteppe, a mining company excavating nearby, alerts her to five large bones unearthed by the powerful winds, which a Russian geologist assigned to Transteppe believes are more than five million years old. Claire identifies them as probably having belonged to a previously unknown elephant ancestor, but she’s dumbfounded by indications that the bones were intentionally arrayed as if by some intelligent creature. The foundation opposes Claire’s efforts to explore further, and she has to struggle to preserve the evidence—and her life—when the area becomes a political football. Linden does a masterly job of integrating intriguing speculative science into a page-turning plot. Agent: Arthur Klebanoff, Scott Meredith.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      For those anticipating the next JURASSIC PARK-like sci-fi--everyone, right?--look no further than Gabra Zackman's fine performance of Eugene Linden's anthropological adventure, set in remote Kazakhstan. This is science writer Linden's first foray into fiction, and he plunges in with a dramatic plot, academic and corporate skullduggery, a touch of romance, and a fascinating hypothesis. Since evolution produced advanced intelligence once (namely us), perhaps it's happened before. And why assume that the intelligent creature had to have been a homo sapien? Zackman rises to the challenge of many diverse characters, giving all the central folks, including American protagonist Claire Knowland and assorted Kazaks, Russians, and Americans, unique and informative voices. Add a steady, even narration, and you have a fun and involving listen. A.C.S. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

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  • English

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