Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Deep Past

A Novel

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

"A gripping thriller . . . bends (if not blows) the mind with deep and compelling ideas about consciousness, intelligence, and our place in the world." —Douglas Preston, #1 New York Times–bestselling author

A routine dig in Kazakhstan takes a radical turn for thirty-two-year-old anthropologist Claire Knowland when a stranger turns up at the site with a bizarre find from a remote section of the desolate Kazakh Steppe. Her initial skepticism of this mysterious discovery gives way to a realization that the find will shake the very foundations of our understanding of evolution and intelligence.

Corrupt politics of Kazakhstan force Claire to take reckless chances with the discovery. Among the allies she gathers in her fight to save herself and bring the discovery to light is Sergei Anachev, a brilliant but enigmatic Russian geologist who becomes her unlikely protector even as he deals with his own unknown crisis.

Ultimately, Claire finds herself fighting not just for the discovery and her academic reputation, but for her very life as great power conflict engulfs the unstable region and an unscrupulous oligarch attempts to take advantage of the chaos.

Drawing on Eugene Linden's celebrated nonfiction investigations into what makes humans different from other species, this international thriller mixes fact and the fantastical, the realities of academic politics, and high stakes geopolitics—engaging the reader every step of the way.

"An excellent thriller with real meat on the bones . . . makes you think as well as sweat." —Lee Child, #1 New York Times–bestselling author

"A fascinating thriller . . . Linden does a masterly job of integrating intriguing speculative science into a page-turning plot." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from March 4, 2019
      Popular science author Linden (The Parrot’s Lament) makes his fiction debut with a fascinating thriller that asks the question: “If evolution could produce intelligence once, could it have produced it more than once?” The Delamain Foundation is funding research in Kazakhstan into how horses became domesticated. When the project head takes ill, American anthropologist Claire Knowland replaces him. Soon after her arrival, Rob Rebolet, head of security for Transteppe, a mining company excavating nearby, alerts her to five large bones unearthed by the powerful winds, which a Russian geologist assigned to Transteppe believes are more than five million years old. Claire identifies them as probably having belonged to a previously unknown elephant ancestor, but she’s dumbfounded by indications that the bones were intentionally arrayed as if by some intelligent creature. The foundation opposes Claire’s efforts to explore further, and she has to struggle to preserve the evidence—and her life—when the area becomes a political football. Linden does a masterly job of integrating intriguing speculative science into a page-turning plot. Agent: Arthur Klebanoff, Scott Meredith.

    • Kirkus

      March 1, 2025
      An archeologist working in Kazakhstan is presented with a discovery that could prove revolutionary, but taking it public proves unexpectedly fraught in Linden's novel. In the hope of landing a full professorship in the anthropology department at Rushmere University, Dr. Claire Knowland accepts a research position on a dig in Kazakhstan investigating the domestication of ancient horses. Her "true passion" is the study of animal intelligence, but as a 32-year-old adjunct, she is willing, however begrudgingly, to make concessions to secure professional advancement. An unexpected discovery piques her interest: Rob Rebolet, the chief of security for the Transteppe mining company, reports that one of his geologists, Russian Sergei Anachev, has found something peculiar--a grouping of "enormous bones" far too large to belong to horses that seem purposefully arrayed in a place where elephants never roamed. The bones predate the rise of any human ancestor, provocatively challenging the accepted scientific interpretations of the evolutionary emergence of intelligence on Earth, a gripping possibility lucidly explained by the author: "If the bones were not arrayed by some ancient human ancestor, could they represent the rise of intelligence in some other mammalian line, which became extinct many millions of years ago? Given the long sweep of life on earth, if evolution could produce intelligence once, could it have produced it more than once?" Such an explosive discovery will almost certainly be commandeered by the profoundly corrupt Kazakh government, and the examination of the bones is waylaid by the violent outbreak of civil war. Sergei is also menaced by Andrei Bezanov, a cruel Russian oligarch with a longstanding grudge against him who aims to take over Transteppe, thereby gaining control of the region's valuable phosphorite reserves. The novel deftly combines a dramatically powerful story with a thrilling scientific possibility, one made impressively accessible by the author. The story ranges from an assassin's attempt on Claire and Sergei's lives to searching discussions of the nature of intelligence and its mysterious appearance in the world, which is made even more inscrutable by the fact that human beings seem to have a monopoly on its possession (though Sergei's findings undermine that assumption). As Dr. Keerbrock, another scientist, puts it to Claire: "Why only us? If rapid environmental change is a driver of intelligence, why don't we find a bunch of other smart animals?" Some of the literary elements of the novel are questionable--Sergei's history of acrimony with Bezanov feels convoluted and contrived, and Bezanov is something of a cartoonish villain, brimming with outsized evil plans and fantasies of revenge. Additionally, the eventfulness of the tale sometimes takes a turn for the formulaic; some of the violence depicted seems culled from popular cinema, and is more canned than exhilarating. Nonetheless, Claire is a memorable hero, as smart as she is empathetic, and Sergei is a profoundly complex character, one with an extraordinary grasp of science and a prudent sense of human nature. This is an immersive tale that is both intellectually enlivening and genuinely entertaining. A deeply intelligent tale about intelligence itself, and the hurdles science must clear to see the light of day.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading