Book Reviews

Review Rating

With the October 2004 review, we began rating the books on the basis of one to four trowels; 
one trowel= don’t bother, to four trowels= run right out to your local book store and buy the hard cover!

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The Ark by Boyd Morrison

Reviewed on: October 1, 2011

**

Touchstone:  New York
2010 (HC)

Boyd Morrison’s novel The Ark is a standard contemporary thriller with a relatively thin veneer of archaeology as a backdrop.  UCLA bio-archaeologist Dilara Kenner is summoned from her Incan excavation in Peru to meet an old family friend, Sam Watson, who is desperate to see her because he has discovered information concerning Dilara’s father—also an archaeologist—who has been missing for some three years.

The two meet at LAX airport, where Sam shares the astounding news that her father had finally discovered the object of his life-long obsession—Noah’s Ark! He tells Dilara a fantastic tale that ties her father’s incredible discovery to an astounding plot in which “they” will kill millions, perhaps billions of people within one week.  He suddenly collapses and dies in her arms—the result of a surreptitious poisoning moments earlier—but not before he is able to gasp that she must seek the help of Tyler Locke of Gordian Engineering to stop this literal mass extinction of humankind.  His enigmatic dying words to her are “…you must find ark…hayden…project…oasis…genesis…dawn…”

Once Dilara Kenner teams up with MIT- and Stanford-educated mechanical engineer and Army combat engineer Tyler Locke, the reader is invited along on an exciting and body-strewn odyssey that leads them into the wilds of Armenia and the unearthing of Noah’s Ark—but an Ark far different from the one we learned of in Sunday School.  But along the way, the heroine and her soon-to-be partner in adventure narrowly escape assassination attempts on an oil drilling platform 200 miles off the coast of Newfoundland, and numerous other near-fatal run-ins with a nefarious foe who is plotting to destroy nearly all of humankind, save he himself and a select band of 300 acolytes who will, like the Biblical Noah and his family old, seek refuge in a modern day high tech ark and then, once the latter-day “flood” has scrubbed the globe clean of human vermin, will re-populate the earth.   Locke and Dilara follow the cryptic clues left by Sam Watson and finally battle to the death with the billionaire industrialist madman Sebastian Ulric within the bowels of Noah’s Ark!

This is a prosaic thriller that follows a fairly established pattern:  the hero and heroine face untold numbers of vehicle chases, ambushes, gunfights, etc. as they race about the globe to gain control of a fabulous (or deadly) artifact before a truly odious villain can beat them to it.  Author Morrison’s The Ark is better than many similar efforts; primarily because of his take on the nature of the eponymous Noah’s Ark is decidedly different from other writers who have plowed the same ground.

Two trowels for the archaeo/techno thriller, The Ark.

Twenty Years in the Trenches: Archaeology in Fiction

William Gresens, longtime MVAC supporter and volunteer, has been writing reviews of archaeological fiction as MVAC’s book reviewer for twenty years.  In this interview Bill shares how he got started writing reviews for MVAC, how the genre has changed, highlights, and his thoughts looking forward. 

Bill Gresen’s Book Review 20th Anniversary

While Bill's reviews go back 20 years now, his relationship with MVAC goes back more than twice that long! The reviews capture some of the things we enjoy most about Bill-- he's perceptive, methodical, a clear thinker, and a whole lot of fun! We look forward to this relationship--and Bill's reviews!--continuing for many years to come.


The March 2021 review marks the 20th anniversary of reviews of archaeological fiction.  It has been my pleasure and great fun to while away the hours reading these books—for the most part, at least—and writing the reviews!  My thanks to MVAC allowing me to prattle on and I look forward to the years ahead.

Bill Gresens