
Highly recommended.Ĭraig Childs understands epiphanies, and he beautifully captures them.along with the moral ambiguities that come from exposing a long-hidden world. This nicely wrought, even poetic book about archeological excavation and the variety of people who are passionate about the past and its artifacts will fascinate everyone from high school students to professional archaeologists digging in the field. "This is a delightful account of the complicated world of archeology by an author who loves (one might say is borderline obsessed with) the past.

The result is a brilliant book about man and nature, remnants and memory, a dashing tale of crime and detection.

We visit lonesome desert canyons and fancy Fifth Avenue art galleries, journey throughout the Americas, Asia, the past and the present. " a superb storyteller.As Childs makes clear in this engrossing book, how people grapple with the past is as varied as history itself.To whom does the past belong? Is the archeologist who discovers a lost tomb a sort of hero-or a villain? If someone steals a relic from a museum and returns it to the ruin it came from, is she a thief? Written in his trademark lyrical style, Craig Childs's riveting new book is a ghost story-an intense, impassioned investigation into the nature of the past and the things we leave behind. " Finders Keepers may be most tender and ferocious dissection.If you have ever ached to possess - or lost what you believed you possessed to change, time or someone else - you may find yourself equally possessed by Childs's razor-edge analysis and compassion."- Mary Sojourner, Psychology Today "Reads almost like a thriller, chock-full of vendettas, suicides and large scale criminal enterprises dedicated to the multimillion-dollar trade in antiques."- NPR, "Weekend All Things Considered" He doubts others as he doubts himself, a beautiful inverse of the golden rule."- Susan Salter Reynolds, Los Angeles Times a fascinating book, full of swashbuckling pothunters, FBI raids, greasy museum curators who don't really care and many, many other characters.Childs looks at moral issues from varied angles.

" a desert ecologist who also happens to be a fine storyteller. "Craig Childs understands epiphanies, and he beautifully captures them.along with the moral ambiguities that come from exposing a long-hidden world."- George Johnson, New York Times Book Review
