Fans of Forbidden Planet and the Twilight Zone episode "To Serve Man" know that all you have to do with an unknown language is look at it until the translation inspirationally comes to you; fans of Star Trek, on the other hand, know that the entire Galaxy (and beyond) speaks English. In real life, however, "lost" languages yield to translational efforts very slowly, and sometime not at all. In this short overview of scripts from ancient Greece, Crete and Cyprus, scholar John Chadwick reveals the often faltering steps that led to the decipherment of Linear B, the earliest known form of Greek, although, at first, no one knew it was Greek. The first tablets were discovered the late 19th Century at Knossos, the citadel from which the legendary King Minos ruled his maritime empire, as related in the myth of Theseus and the Minotaur, and Sir Arthur Evans (the discoverer) assumed the language was Minoan; not until the 1950s (long after Evans' death) would it become known that the language was actually Greek. That discovery was made by Michael Ventris, a hobbyist linguist who became fascinated with the mystery when he was 14. Ventris later partnered with Chadwick (author of this book)to prove the Hellenic nature of the script and to produce a syllabary. While Chadwick acknowledges this work, he should have also noted the tragedy of Michael Ventris, that the young man died in an auto accident in 1957, just a couple of weeks before publication of his life's work. Another fact rather glossed over in this text is the fact that all Linear B tablets were preserved by fire; while it's mentioned, the significance is not explained - if it had not been for the destruction of the Minoan and Mycenaean palaces by invaders the tablets would not have been vitrified. In other words, they record not the civilization at its zenith but at the moment of its death. In that light, a document that recorded the establishment and organization of a coastguard service takes on a more ironic (and alarming) significance. In addition to Linear B, other related scripts are examined, but not in any detail, though with enough depth to lead interested readers to other, more exhaustive studies. Chadwick also takes a look at the so-called Phaistos Disk, obligatory in a survey such as this because it was discovered on Crete, even though there is a good possibility that it really has nothing to do with either the Minoans or the Mycenaeans, and may have been imported from elsewhere. The Disk was untranslated at the time of Chadwick's writing, and remains so to this day, despite the claims of scholars and loons, whose "solutions" range from the prosaic (pre-Minoan, Basque & Indus) to the outlandish (Egypt, Atlantis & Mars). Chadwick's own estimation of the Disk concurs with mine, that the Disk will remain undecipherable...one of the reasons Linear B yielded to translation was due to a large number of various documents but, with the Disk, it remains a one-of-a-kind enigma. Though short and in places superficial, this book is great for the historian or budding linguist who needs a starting place from which to launch further investigation.