For my 50th birthday, my wife and I spent a week in Valladolid, taking day trips to various Mayan sites. Some sites, like Ek Balam, we had completely to ourselves. It was desolate, and only partially excavated. Having now read Incidents of Travel, I am so envious of John Stephens and the amazing exploration he undertook in the mid-1800s. On our drive from Cancun to Valladolid, we passed numerous thatched houses, hidden in the woods. They are probably modern versions of structures described by Mr. Stephens, similar to houses Mayans have been inhabiting for centuries.
The most impressive aspect of this 170-year-old work is its objectivity. Mr. Stephens admires the Mayan people, and abhors bullfighting and subjugation of the Mayans to the Spanish. He points out the hypocrisy of the Catholic Church, but esteems the priests nonetheless. The book is an interesting window into a region that that gets all too little attention and a culture that is certainly under-appreciated. The Mayans are among the most advanced civilizations ever known, and while millions are spent investigating the Egyptian sites, hundreds of known Mayan sites remained buried and unexplored.