'Thunderhead' by authors Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child is an exciting adventure tale. It reminds me of Indiana Jones, but instead of Harrison Ford, we have a female protagonist, Nora Kelly, an assistant professor at The Santa Fe Archaeological Institute. Our intrepid archaeologist, fights peril at ever turn in a suspense laden narrative. Two things I love about this novel: Firstly, is how the authors throw in so many archaeological facts, especially about the Anasazi, an ancient North American people, and the ruins of the cliff dwellers in Utah, their potsherds, and other relics and artifacts. Secondly, descriptions of the group dynamics of the team that searches for the ancient city of Quivira, "The House of the Bloody Cliff," are stellar.
Outsized egos are part of the equation on the team that's selected by Ernest Goddard, Chairman of the Board of The Santa Fe Institute. Only Peter Holroyd is selected by Nora, a favor returned for his help in procuring satellite images of the ancient Anasazi trail that Nora believes her father followed sixteen years old on a trip from which he never returned. Other members of the team are Luigi Bonarotti, camp manager and cook, who serves haute cuisine on the trail, Roscoe Swire, poet cowboy and wrangler, who memorializes the spirit of his horses in his journal, and Bill Smithback, a journalist and author, who arrives in a stretch limo, amid a flurry of fanfare, threatening the clandestine nature of the venture. The remaining members of the team are the archaeologists, Aaron Black, a famous geochronologist, a scientist who determines the age of things (he delves into ancient trash dumps to learn what he can about the people, studying hair, bones, feces, etc.), Enrique Aragon, an anthropologist and medical doctor, and Sloane Goddard, Ernest Goddard's daughter. Sloane is an archaeologist, pilot, experienced mountain climber, horseback rider, beautiful, and all things extraordinaire, with something to prove to her father, who has always expected her to be number one, always come out on top, and never settle for the number two spot. Nora rounds out the crew as its director; all answer to her.
Nora is trying to prove that Quivira exists so that she can prove to herself that her father was not just a dreamer, that the trail he followed sixteen years ago does indeed lead to Quivira. Nora's father lit the fire of archaeology in her; he was a man who told her and her brother, Skip he loved them every day. Sloane and the other archaeologists desire their names in the archaeological hall of fame; they want recognition. Sloane confides in Nora that her father never told her he loved her. When the strenuous trek up the canyons weighs on the team members, fissures appear in the group. With ever mounting tensions, dissent and divisiveness proliferates.
Another beautiful thing to love about 'Thunderhead' is the gorgeous descriptive language of the environment and nature, or perhaps its just the way the authors build suspense against the natural backdrop. Either way, I could make visual pictures in my mind of the ruins, the kivas, the high canyon walls and narrow slot canyons, the horses and their behaviors, and I could hear the sounds of thunder reverberate against the walls of massive rock. Recommended.