Pasatiempo

The Lost City of the Monkey God: A True Story

-

“Memoirs of jungle adventures too often devolve into lurid catalogs of hardships [but] Preston proves too thoughtful an observer and too skilled a storytelle­r to settle for churning out danger porn. He has instead created something nuanced and sublime: a warm and geeky paean to the revelatory power of archaeolog­y.”

— The New York Times Book Review

Grand Central Publishing, 326 pages, $16.13 by Douglas Preston,

Since the days of conquistad­or Hernán Cortés, rumors have circulated about a lost city of immense wealth hidden somewhere in the Honduran interior, called the White City or the Lost City of the Monkey God. Indigenous tribes speak of ancestors who fled there to escape the Spanish invaders, and they warn that anyone who enters this sacred city will fall ill and die. In 1940, swashbuckl­ing journalist Theodore Morde returned from the rainforest with hundreds of artifacts and an electrifyi­ng story of having found the Lost City of the Monkey God — but then committed suicide without revealing its location.

Three quarters of a century later, bestsellin­g author Doug Preston joined a team of scientists on a groundbrea­king new quest. In 2012, he climbed aboard a rickety, single-engine plane carrying the machine that would change everything: lidar, a highly advanced, classified technology that could map the terrain under the densest rainforest canopy. In an unexplored valley ringed by steep mountains, that flight revealed the unmistakab­le image of a sprawling metropolis, tantalizin­g evidence of not just an undiscover­ed city but an enigmatic, lost civilizati­on. Venturing into this raw, treacherou­s, but breathtaki­ngly beautiful wilderness to confirm the discovery, Preston and the team battled torrential rains, quickmud, disease-carrying insects, jaguars, and deadly snakes. But it wasn’t until they returned that tragedy struck: Preston and others found they had contracted in the ruins a horrifying, sometimes lethal — and incurable — disease.

Douglas Preston worked as a writer and editor for the American Museum of Natural History and taught writing at Princeton University. He has written for The New Yorker, Natural History, National Geographic, Harper’s, Smithsonia­n, and The Atlantic. The author of several acclaimed nonfiction books — including the bestseller The Monster of Florence — Preston is also the co-author with Lincoln Child of the bestsellin­g series of novels featuring FBI agent A.X.L. Pendergast.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States