Excavation
by James Rollins 
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High in the Andes, Dr. Henry Conklin discovers a 500-year-old mummy that should not be there. While deep in the South American jungle, Conklin's nephew, Sam, stumbles upon a remarkable site nestled between two towering peaks, a place hidden from human eyes for thousands of years. Ingenious traps have been laid to ensnare the careless and unsuspecting, and wealth beyond imagining could be the reward for those with the courage to face the terrible unknown. But where the perilous journey inward show more ends-in the cold, shrouded heart of a breathtaking necropolis-something else is waiting for Sam Conklin and his exploratory party. A thing created by Man, yet not humanly possible. Something wondrous . . . something terrifying. show lessTags
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SomeGuyInVirginia Underground journey.
Member Reviews
I don’t know what you call this book... how about Fantasy Romance Adventure. Long story short, I didn’t think it was very entertaining or creative. It was like Indiana Jones crossed with Da Vinci Code crossed with Jurassic Park crossed with Zombie Apocalypse crossed with At Play in the Fields of the Lord... with maybe a little Wonkaville thrown in. I don’t know that I could come up with enough super superlatives to quite do it justice. Let’s just say that I found it generally dumb. It took me forever to finish because it was just dumb, not engaging at all.
All the men and women, boys and girls were one-dimensional caricatures of stereotypes; Indy! Indy Senior! Marion! Shorty! Bad Guys! Mummy! And the story unfolds in Indiana show more Jones meets Da Vinci Code fashion. “Thankfully” boy hero meets girl femme fatale... well, at least they finally figure it out after working side by side for months and months; life and death situations will apparently do that for you. “Wonderfully” man hero meets woman femme fatale... well, at least they finally figure it out after having known each other for years and years; life and death situations will apparently do that for you.
The entire book all the good guys and gals modulate between acting like Keystone Cops or... Jason Bourne... except 99% of the time they were the incompetent nitwits. You’re left wondering how they were never eaten by wolves growing up let alone having the intelligence and resourcefulness to ever become respected members of their professional fields.
There’s also some weird space-time continuum going on as the characters managed to get from Washington DC to Peru in a blink of an eye, but it took a full day to get the 45 miles from Cuzco to Machu Picchu by plane and helicopter. By and by we find a civilization that has remained lost in the Andes for more than 500 years. There we find the Texan walking around with his rifle poised to shoot anything that moves. Death and destruction ensues while the characters engage in dialog consisting of mostly stupid and snippy comments.
I thought this part was particularly apt:
Sam noticed the photographer’s tension. “What’s wrong?”
Norman shook his head. “Nothing. I’ve just seen too many cheap horror movies.”
“So?”
“Splitting up the group. In horror movies, that’s when the killer starts knocking off the college co-eds.”
... and then the author goes on to kill off the token black character in the story. Lame. show less
All the men and women, boys and girls were one-dimensional caricatures of stereotypes; Indy! Indy Senior! Marion! Shorty! Bad Guys! Mummy! And the story unfolds in Indiana show more Jones meets Da Vinci Code fashion. “Thankfully” boy hero meets girl femme fatale... well, at least they finally figure it out after working side by side for months and months; life and death situations will apparently do that for you. “Wonderfully” man hero meets woman femme fatale... well, at least they finally figure it out after having known each other for years and years; life and death situations will apparently do that for you.
The entire book all the good guys and gals modulate between acting like Keystone Cops or... Jason Bourne... except 99% of the time they were the incompetent nitwits. You’re left wondering how they were never eaten by wolves growing up let alone having the intelligence and resourcefulness to ever become respected members of their professional fields.
There’s also some weird space-time continuum going on as the characters managed to get from Washington DC to Peru in a blink of an eye, but it took a full day to get the 45 miles from Cuzco to Machu Picchu by plane and helicopter. By and by we find a civilization that has remained lost in the Andes for more than 500 years. There we find the Texan walking around with his rifle poised to shoot anything that moves. Death and destruction ensues while the characters engage in dialog consisting of mostly stupid and snippy comments.
I thought this part was particularly apt:
Sam noticed the photographer’s tension. “What’s wrong?”
Norman shook his head. “Nothing. I’ve just seen too many cheap horror movies.”
“So?”
“Splitting up the group. In horror movies, that’s when the killer starts knocking off the college co-eds.”
... and then the author goes on to kill off the token black character in the story. Lame. show less
I enjoyed the storyline in this book. It's unique and interesting. The characters were a bit stereotypical, but certainly not the worst I've read. What I didn't appreciate, and could have done without....the excessive romantic elements. Look, I don't mind a bit of romance and I don't mind sex or relationship involvement, it's a reality of human life and needs to be included for realistic value. But, I can't stomache romance novels and that's what this felt like....an unrealistic and cheesy romance novel. At times the story read more like a romance novel with a bit of thriller/ suspense on the side, rather than the other way around. Unfortunately, it ruined the read a bit for me.
"Excavation" starts out on an archeological dig in the Peruvian Andes. . It was a fun read and the action never let up. After an unplanned event the main characters in the book are trapped in a cave and have to find their way to daylight again, encountering everything from booby traps, spiders, bats and aggressive, carnivorous mutants. There are two main story lines going at the same time. The group that is trying to survive and return to the world again and a connected story that involves two other main characters that are trying to solve a mystery tied to the dig.
On his dig in Peru, Professor Henry Conklin believes he has unearthed a mummy that will prove that there was an ancient Indian civilization that predated the Incas and show more inhabited the jungle first. Henry has left the dig site in the hands of his nephew Sam and the other graduate students while he escorts the mummy back to the United States for further examination. No one can foresee the danger that is waiting for everyone associated with the dig. Years of searching for a mysterious substance that can heal wounds and resurrect the dead have led multiple groups with multiple motivations to terminate the Professor and his discoveries.
James Rollins never fails to entertain with his wild stories of mystery and intrigue set in an archeological setting. The story and adventure kept me turning the pages. This is another fun and exciting James Rollins novel. show less
On his dig in Peru, Professor Henry Conklin believes he has unearthed a mummy that will prove that there was an ancient Indian civilization that predated the Incas and show more inhabited the jungle first. Henry has left the dig site in the hands of his nephew Sam and the other graduate students while he escorts the mummy back to the United States for further examination. No one can foresee the danger that is waiting for everyone associated with the dig. Years of searching for a mysterious substance that can heal wounds and resurrect the dead have led multiple groups with multiple motivations to terminate the Professor and his discoveries.
James Rollins never fails to entertain with his wild stories of mystery and intrigue set in an archeological setting. The story and adventure kept me turning the pages. This is another fun and exciting James Rollins novel. show less
This book was so much fun..! Things get more and more unbelievable as the book goes on- I felt compelled to call people with similar senses of humor and read the particularly good (as in absurd) (as in Swarm of Albino Cave Tarantulas!) parts aloud. It was nice to spend a few hours drunk on Ultimate Adventure Glee.
Well, again a search for a lost tribe, again a scientific discovery based on Nano technology...... A group of archaeologists excavating an old ruin to prove the existence of a lost tribe and got tangled within the excavated site... deadly traps, mutated creatures, a cult sect try to possess what lay within the ruins along with a mixture of science... A typical James Rollins touch, but, this novel resembles a bit of Subterranean and The Devil Colony by the same author... Started pretty well and as it carried on, it felt a perfect Hollywood movie... then the lag started in with spiders and mutated creatures... though the finishing (epilogue) made up for it
As a second book this isn't bad but when compared to the Sigma novels and his books as James Clemens it loses something.
I liked the fact that when the scientists were doing their thing he didn't feel the need to explain it in laymen's terms, treating the readers as adults and assuming that if we don't know what something means and we want to know we will go and look it up. It did make me want to know more about the Incas and the tribes that came before them.
I liked the fact that when the scientists were doing their thing he didn't feel the need to explain it in laymen's terms, treating the readers as adults and assuming that if we don't know what something means and we want to know we will go and look it up. It did make me want to know more about the Incas and the tribes that came before them.
It's a fast-paced adrenaline rush. An archaeology adventure mixed with sci-fi and horror makes an excellent read. I found it hard to put down, and this is my fifth time reading it. I love it.
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Author Information

103+ Works 49,321 Members
James Rollins (nee James Czajkowski) was born in Chicago, Illinois on August 20, 1961. He received a doctorate in veterinary medicine from the University of Missouri in 1985. After graduation, he started his veterinary practice in Sacramento, California. His first novel, Subterranean, was published in 1999. His other works include the Sigma Force show more series, the Jake Ransom series, and Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull. He also writes the Banned and the Banished series and The Godslayer Chronicles under the name of James Clemens. James Rollins co-authors the new Tucker Wayne series with Grant Blackwood. The first book in the series, The Kill Switch, made the New York Times bestseller list in 2014. Rollins title, Bone Labyrinth, a story in the Sigma Force Novels Series, made the New York Times bestseller list in 2015. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
- Canonical title
- Excavation
- Original title
- Excavation
- Original publication date
- 2000
- People/Characters
- Henry Conklin; Sam Conklin; Joan Engel
- Important places
- Peru
- First words
- There was no escape.
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"Welcome," he whispered to the newcomers. "Welcome to Earth."
- Blurbers
- Preston, Douglas
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 1,736
- Popularity
- 12,661
- Reviews
- 20
- Rating
- (3.75)
- Languages
- 8 — Czech, English, German, Greek, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Russian
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 31
- ASINs
- 9




















































