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Catherine Crook de Camp (1907–2000)

Auteur de Les énigmes de l'archéologie / Encyclopédie Planète

16+ oeuvres 1,000 utilisateurs 8 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Crédit image: Cimon Avaro

Séries

Œuvres de Catherine Crook de Camp

The Incorporated Knight (1987) 161 exemplaires
Swords of Zinjaban (1991) 112 exemplaires
The Pixilated Peeress (1991) 96 exemplaires
Science Fiction Handbook, Revised (1975) 84 exemplaires
The Stones of Nomuru (1988) 73 exemplaires
The Bones of Zora (Krishna Series) (1983) 72 exemplaires
The day of the dinosaur (1968) 48 exemplaires
Creatures of the cosmos (1977) 14 exemplaires
3000 Years of Fantasy and Science Fiction (1972) — Directeur de publication — 12 exemplaires
Tales Beyond Time: From Fantasy to Science Fiction. (1973) — Complier & Contributor — 7 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Requiem (1992) — Contributeur — 736 exemplaires
Conan The Barbarian [film novelisation: 1982] (1982) — Contributeur — 311 exemplaires
Wall of Serpents (1960) — Introduction, quelques éditions240 exemplaires
Time and Chance: An Autobiography (1996) — Directeur de publication — 31 exemplaires

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Since I seem to manage money okay, maybe this book that I read when I was 15 did its job?

I really have no idea and no memory of this book aside from either a diary entry or a list entry. (I can obsess over lists. My 15 year old self obsessed over lists.)

3 stars since it was forgettable (apparently) but also 3 stars because I can balance my checkbook and pay my bills.
 
Signalé
Chica3000 | Dec 11, 2020 |
De Camp was a man of many talents (or a wearer of many hats, at any rate), but he was neither an archaeologist nor an anthropologist. Citadels of Mystery, therefore, reads like what it is: the scribblings of a hobbyist who had sufficient funds and leisure to travel the world taking snapshots of ancient ruins. He references many other authors, but De Camp's terse pronouncements are absurdly funny considering how little he knew about the subject himself. "If they sprang from a common civilized center, the Egyptians and the Mayas ought to have shared such things as maize and smallpox," concludes De Camp, blissfully unaware of what the two civilizations did share: an identical solar calendar with the basic length of 360 days, rounding off the year with a short month of five "bad" or "nameless" days. That's an unusually specific commonality between two cultures whose paths, according to the author, never crossed. "Present informed opinion does not take the Diffusionist claims seriously," he declares elsewhere. How chagrined De Camp would be to read the conclusion of a recent study published in Current Biology (October 2017): that, while researchers have found no evidence of genetic intermingling between South American natives and Easter Islanders, they concede that "some cultural exchange occurred between the Americas and Polynesia before the impact of European colonization." In other words, Sprague, the Diffusionist claims have withstood the rigors of science...while you are deader than the dodo. (Interestingly, De Camp's Wikipedia page notes that his parents sent him to a military-style school "to cure him of intellectual arrogance." I offer no further comment, except to say that perhaps the cure didn't take.)

Two stars for the inclusion of Great Zimbabwe and Nan Madol, fascinating archaeological sites about which relatively little has been written.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Jonathan_M | 2 autres critiques | Nov 1, 2017 |
The De Camps love their Freud just a tad too much, as any time they don't have actual evidence or proof of something, they throw in psychoanalytic babble. It's informative for some of its facts (and at the time of its publication, there weren't that many other sources of information), but its suppositions and extrapolations keep this from being a solid reference.
 
Signalé
SESchend | 2 autres critiques | Sep 6, 2017 |
(original title Ancient Ruins and Archaeology)

Reading Ancient Engineers inspired me to dig out and reread my copy of Citadels of Mystery (and log it into LibraryThing as it wasn't already logged). A useful gaming reference especially for pulp era games; the book describes 12 sites, debunks various myths associated with them and speculates on their actual history and purpose. The sites covered are:

Atlantis and the City of Silver
Pyramid Hill and the Claustrophobic King
Stonehenge and the Giants' Dance
Troy and the Nine Cities
Ma'rib and the Queen of Sheba
Zimbabwe and King Solomon's Mines
Tintagel and the Table Round
Angkor and the Golden Window
Tikal and the Feathered Elephants
Machu Picchu and the Unwalled Fortress
Nan Matol and the Sacred Turtle
Rapa Nui and the Eyeless Watchers

Again, an old book (originally published in 1964), with a post script which probably dates from the 1972 reprint. This adds the Santorini connection to the Atlantis legend, and adds more on the Stonehenge calendar theory. I found the writing style to be more accessible than Ancient Engineers.

For what it does, fine, but as with Ancient Engineers don't expect any in-depth exposition. It reads rather like a Ken Hite column, especially from Suppressed Transmission although with more Theosophy etc than Antarctic Space Nazis. Also reminscent of the more recent Osprey titles along the same lines.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Maddz | 2 autres critiques | Feb 14, 2017 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
16
Aussi par
4
Membres
1,000
Popularité
#25,785
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
8
ISBN
42
Langues
3

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