From the Publisher
Carlsen’s masterful chronicle of [Stephens and Catherwood’s] explorations is a welcome excursion to a fascinating story set in the golden age of exploration.” — The Missourian
“Thrilling. ... Jungle of Stone is a tale of two men that makes Indiana Jones look like a stay-at-home slacker. … Full of astonishing adventures and breathtaking discoveries. … Carlsen brings both research skills and a gift for narrative to this book.” — Tampa Bay Times
“Carlson’s book brings these important explorers back to the limelight they so richly deserve.” — The Explorers Journal: The Official Quarterly of The Explorers Club
“The book succeeds in all ways. … A highly readable, fascinating historical narrative.” — Providence Journal
“[A] gripping, informative history.” — San Jose Mercury News
“Carlsen is an engaging guide, at home in the jungle. ... There’s plenty to like in [his] account.” — Wall Street Journal
“Thrilling. ... A captivating history of two men who dramatically changed their contemporaries’ view of the past.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Lively. ... Ably researching [Stephens and Catherwood] and affectingly describing their friendship, Carlsen makes an exemplary contribution to the lost-cities genre.” — Booklist (starred review)
“With verve and vigor... Carlsen finely explicates the challenges of the Catherwood-Stephens expedition and the wonders they found.” — Publishers Weekly
“Carlsen’s cogent and well-written dual biography successfully illuminates the fascinating tale of these intrepid pioneers of a lost civilization. ... [An] adventure tale that make[s] Indiana Jones seem tame.” — Library Journal
“If you’re hankering for a good adventure, there is no better book this spring. … This account reads like an adventure novel, but it has the added benefit of being completely true. Armchair explorers, history buffs, and anyone who loves a good journey: Don’t miss this book.” — Bookish
Library Journal
Pulitzer Prize finalist Carlsen reconstructs the journey. Lots of in-house love for this one.”
The Explorers Journal: The Official Quarterly of The Explorers Club
Carlson’s book brings these important explorers back to the limelight they so richly deserve.
Wall Street Journal
Carlsen is an engaging guide, at home in the jungle. ... There’s plenty to like in [his] account.
Providence Journal
The book succeeds in all ways. … A highly readable, fascinating historical narrative.
Booklist (starred review)
Lively. ... Ably researching [Stephens and Catherwood] and affectingly describing their friendship, Carlsen makes an exemplary contribution to the lost-cities genre.
San Jose Mercury News
[A] gripping, informative history.
Tampa Bay Times
Thrilling. ... Jungle of Stone is a tale of two men that makes Indiana Jones look like a stay-at-home slacker. … Full of astonishing adventures and breathtaking discoveries. … Carlsen brings both research skills and a gift for narrative to this book.
The Missourian
Carlsen’s masterful chronicle of [Stephens and Catherwood’s] explorations is a welcome excursion to a fascinating story set in the golden age of exploration.
Wall Street Journal
Carlsen is an engaging guide, at home in the jungle. ... There’s plenty to like in [his] account.
Bookish
If you’re hankering for a good adventure, there is no better book this spring. … This account reads like an adventure novel, but it has the added benefit of being completely true. Armchair explorers, history buffs, and anyone who loves a good journey: Don’t miss this book.
Kirkus Reviews
★ 2016-01-18
Daring adventurers unearth a buried civilization. In his thrilling debut history, journalist and Pulitzer Prize finalist Carlsen traces the arduous journeys of lawyer John Lloyd Stephens and architect/artist Frederick Catherwood into the jungles of Central America. Both seasoned travelers to Rome, Greece, and throughout the Middle East, in 1839, when the two boarded a ship bound for the Gulf of Honduras, they had read only "vague reports of intricately sculpted stones" hinting at the existence of "a hidden unknown world." Those reports, and the intrepid voyages of naturalists such as Alexander von Humboldt, fueled their "hunger for adventure, the quest, the whiff of danger." Danger proved more than a whiff on 2,500 miles of life-threatening travel—both men contracted malaria and other tropical diseases, and civil wars raged—as they pursued their dream. In a battered Toyota, Carlsen followed their footsteps, and he evokes in palpable detail the tangled forests, punishing deserts, and cliffhanging mountain paths that they traversed. Stephens and Catherwood had no idea what to expect: common knowledge had it that Central America had been inhabited by primitive indigenous tribes. But they found shocking evidence of a sophisticated culture. "Architecture, sculpture, and painting, all the arts which embellish life, had flourished in this overgrown forest; orators, warriors, and statesmen, beauty, ambition, and glory had lived and passed away," Stephens wrote in a travel book, impressively illustrated by Catherwood, that became a bestseller. "It was a mystery," Carlsen writes, "of staggering implications." As the "acknowledged progenitor of American archaeology," Stephens could only guess at what he had found: he lacked the methodology and tools that would enable later archaeologists to date findings and flesh out Mayan history. A subsequent trip in 1841 yielded another volume, so eagerly anticipated that it was a bestseller even before "rapturous reviews" appeared. A captivating history of two men who dramatically changed their contemporaries' view of the past.