
THE LOST GODDESS
By: Tom Knox
Viking Penguin: New York
2012 (HC)
Tom Knox has again authored an imaginative—and
violent—thriller, using a literary device he first employed in his first
effort, The Genesis Secret, to great effect. He initially spins two
tales—widely divergent in terms of place, character and plot—and then brings
them inexorably closer until they finally merge in a near-cataclysmic
denouement. He also uses two very dark and enigmatic archaeological sites
as the scenes for his fictional exploration of the heart of
darkness—mankind’s propensity to do great evil: The Plain of Jars in
war-torn Laos and the limestone cave system of Cham des Bondons in a remote
part of the South of France.
Archaeologist Julia Kerrigan’s fifteen year career has
been lackluster at best until her excavations in the caves of Cham des
Bondons reveal three 7,000 year old skulls that show signs of trepanation
(holes surgically drilled) in the foreheads and the equally ancient skeletal
remains of a man, a woman and two children with multiple projectile points
lodged in them. But her excitement at this career-changing find is quickly
dashed when her supervisor and mentor, Ghislaine Quinelles, dismissed her
discoveries as having no importance and he basically fires her, telling her
to leave France and go back to the United States where her paltry skills can
be put to better use excavating thirty year old post offices! Distraught
almost beyond words, she seeks solace from her friend and colleague, Annika
Neumann, who is also working on the Cham des Bondons site and had been
Ghislaine’s lover back in their student days at the Sorbonne in the
rebellious late 1960s. A call from the police informs them that Ghislaine
has been brutally murdered—brutally and sadistically slashed to death. As
Julia’s world seems to spin out of control, Annika soon becomes the next
victim of this crazed killer. But Annika has managed to leave an unfinished
e-mail for Julia that begins to tell of the great guilt she has borne for
many decades, a guilt that goes back to the mid-1970s when she and Ghislaine
and other Marxist anthropologists, archaeologists and biologists
participated in unspeakable atrocities sponsored by the governments of
Cambodia—then called Kampuchea—and Red China. She is killed before she can
explain the nature of these activities, but Julia finds herself driven to
find the meaning behind the brutal deaths of her friends and colleagues.
She follows the trail of Ghislaine’s research to the Parisian Museum of Man
and there discovers a link between the trepanned skulls she has discovered
in Europe and similar practices in what was Indo-China—now present-day Laos,
Cambodia, Thailand and Vietnam, and she sets out to Southeast Asia to solve
the mystery.
Meanwhile, down on his luck photojournalist Jake Thurby
is hanging out in the backwater Laotian town of Vang Vieng. His career,
like that of Julia Kerrigan’s, is going nowhere fast. But he gets a tip
from an old friend, a world-weary war correspondent knocking around
Southeast Asia, that he should check out Chemda Tek, a beautiful young
Cambodian lawyer working for the UN, who is researching the war crimes that
took place on the Laotian Plain of Jars under the brutal Khmer Rouge regime
in the 1970s; perhaps she would need a photojournalist to help her document
her studies. The two join forces and proceed to uncover evidence of
incredible brutality conducted thirty years earlier. But it is evident that
very recent murders of participants in those long-ago atrocities means that
the past is not yet over—and those present day murderers now have Jake and
Chemda in their crosshairs—particularly after the trail takes them to the
Plain of Jars, and in those eponymous stone jars are skulls, some of which
are thousands of years old, showing signs of trepanning. Fleeing across
Laos, Cambodia Thailand with killers on their heels, Chemda and Jake follow
a trail of death and barbarity that leads them to a darkly malevolent
research facility in the wilds of Tibet.
This is where the lives of Jake and Chemda intertwine
with that of Julia Kerrigan and the three of them face a contemporary evil
whose roots go back to the time of Early Man.
This novel has all the ingredients of a grand thriller,
but it simply fails to deliver. The main characters, while mildly
interesting on the surface, have no depth and are really rather trite and
boring. But good plotting can often offset poor characterization; but
nothing can offset poor writing and the author’s imaginative storyline is
too often marred by seemingly endless purple prose, discordant metaphors and
similes, and curious verbs.
A few examples might demonstrate how disruptive they
can be to an otherwise engaging plot: “The whole place vibrated with
memories, with jungly and luxuriant nostalgia; (p. 79)… “The sleek Peugeot
oiled into the drive with an authoritative scrunch; (p. 87)…”Wearied by his
own anxiety, and the sadistic heat, Jake lay back against the uncomfortable
planks of the pirogue, and almost immediately felt the mermaids of sleep
dragging him under.” (p. 110)…”The shock was arctic. Liquidly chilling.
What was that?” (p. 130). And so it goes for much of the novel’s 430
pages.
Two trowels for The Lost Goddess.
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