Maya Gateway
A gateway
will open
onto an
ancient darkness

The Maya Gateway
Near the end of the Mayan empire, a high priest commits a murder where a sacrifice is needed.The events he sets in motion are far more sinister than he ever imagine High technology, shamanic visions and deadly mythology mix and come alive in this fantastic journey built on authentic Mayan history.

Lydia Rosenstrom is a master translator working with an archeological team in the Yucatan, in the ruins of Pakabtún. She's also over-seeing a Virtual Reality simulation of Pakabtún at the Howland Museum in Portland, Oregon. Her discoveries are becoming more interesting … but much more dangerous. This tightly woven, action-packed tale blends mysticism, technology and archaeology into an engrossing story. The novel, which takes place in 2005, includes real-time Mayan and Gregorian calendar events. Published by Windstorm Creative.

four carved glyphsThe Glyphs
Four roughly carved glyphs hold the key to a mysterious and deadly gateway. But can Lydia translate the strange symbols fast enough to prevent more deaths — including her own?

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Researching the Maya
When we started working on this story, we visited the Mexican Yucatan Peninsula, talked with people there, and took lots of pictures. (We also read every authoritative book we could get our hands on and attended a workshop on glyphs.) At right is the huge stone arch at
Kabah, a monumental gateway to the past — much like the one that Lydia gazes at and wonders, "Where will this gateway lead me?"

wall of chac sculptures
 
Uxmal
  Xocen
"They’re Chac masks. Images of the rain god, but they look like monsters to me." … "Monsters, yes. But not as in our monster movies. These are `monstrous’ in the sense of being marvelous, extraordinary, supremely powerful."
(Photo from Kabah, quote from The Maya Gateway.)
  "Caan sees a ruined city, empty of human souls. Many of the temples and palaces are crumbling and half-consumed by the encroaching, low-lying jungle. Some have been reduced to piles of rubble as serpentine vines tug and pull at loose boulders and stones."
(Photo from Uxmal, quote from The Maya Gateway.)
  "Like most of the other houses in the village, Lydia's hut consisted of one room with a clay floor and walls made from straight, slender tree-trunk poles with flexible branches woven through them like a giant basket."
(Photo from the village of Xocen, quote from The Maya Gateway.)

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