Difference between revisions of "Dug to Death"

From Archaeopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
(New page: == Dug to Death == - A tale of archaeological mthod and mayhem. Adrian Praetzellis, 2003 Altamira Press, Walnut Creek. Well is it a spoof? Set in an excavation in Victoria, Central Ota...)
 
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 
 
== Dug to Death ==
 
== Dug to Death ==
 +
[[Image:DugtoDeath.jpg|right|200px]]
 +
'A tale of archaeological method and mayhem'.
  
- A tale of archaeological mthod and mayhem.
+
[http://www.sonoma.edu/users/p/praetzel/ Adrian Praetzellis], 2003 Altamira Press, Walnut Creek.
  
Adrian Praetzellis, 2003 Altamira Press, Walnut Creek.
+
Well is it a spoof? A who-dunit set in an excavation in Victoria (thinly diguised Queenstown), Central Otago undertaken by the University of Invercargill it is clearly fiction at one level - but it is also a primer on underaking excavations. Praetzellis has spent some time in New Zealand so the local references are knowing. The New Zealand English glossary is a hoot.
  
Well is it a spoof? Set in an excavation in Victoria, Central Otago undertaken by the University of Invercargill it is clearly fiction - but it is also a who-dunit and a primer on underaking excavations.  Praetzellis has spent some time here so the local references are knowing. The New Zealand English glossary is a hoot.
+
[[Barber Ian|Ian Barber]] has reviewed it in Archaeology in New Zealand 2005 48(4):256-58.
  
Ian Barber has reviwed it in Archaeology in New Zealand.
+
There are other reviews linked [http://books.google.co.nz/books?id=JxVdTpPvrNoC&sitesec=reviews&source=gbs_navlinks_s here.]
  
  
[[Category:Spoof_Books]]
+
[[Category:Spoof_Books]] [[Category:Fiction]]

Latest revision as of 22:05, 16 August 2019

Dug to Death

DugtoDeath.jpg

'A tale of archaeological method and mayhem'.

Adrian Praetzellis, 2003 Altamira Press, Walnut Creek.

Well is it a spoof? A who-dunit set in an excavation in Victoria (thinly diguised Queenstown), Central Otago undertaken by the University of Invercargill it is clearly fiction at one level - but it is also a primer on underaking excavations. Praetzellis has spent some time in New Zealand so the local references are knowing. The New Zealand English glossary is a hoot.

Ian Barber has reviewed it in Archaeology in New Zealand 2005 48(4):256-58.

There are other reviews linked here.