Bones of the Earth (Book Synopsis) by Michael Swanwick Buy from Amazon.comPage 1 of 1 Paleontologist Richard Leyster has achieved professional nirvana: a position
with the Smithsonian Museum plus a groundbreaking dinosaur fossil site he can
research, publish on, and learn from for years to come. There is nothing
that could lure him away -- until a disturbingly secretive stranger named
Griffin enters Leyster's office with an ice cooler and a job offer. In the
cooler is the head of a freshly killed Stegosaurus.
Griffin has been entrusted with an extraordinary gift, an impossible
technology on loan to humanity from unknown beings for an undisclosed purpose.
Time travel has become a reality millions of years before it rationally could
be. With it, Richard Leyster and his colleagues can make their most cherished
fantasy come true. They can study the dinosaurs up close, in their own time and
milieu.
Now, suddenly, individual lives can turn back on themselves. People can
meet, shake hands, and converse with their younger versions at various
crossroads in time. One wrong word, a single misguided act, could be disastrous
to the project and to the world. But Griffin must make sure everything that is
supposed to happen does happen -- no matter who is destined to be
hurt... or die.
And then there's Dr. Gertrude Salley -- passionate, fearless, and brutally
ambitious -- a genius rebel in the tight community of "bone men" and women.
Alternately both Leyster's and Griffin's chief rival, trusted colleague,
despised nemesis, and inscrutable lover at various junctures throughout time,
Salley is relentlessly driven to screw with the working mechanisms of natural
law, audaciously trespassing in forbidden areas, pushing paradox to the edge no
matter what the consequences may be. And, when they concern the largest, most
savage creatures that ever lived, the consequences may be terrifying
indeed. Buy from Amazon.com
Copyright© 2002, HarperCollins Publishers. All rights reserved. No part of this may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher. This synopsis has been provided by HarperCollins and printed with their permission.
|