Dr Irving Finkel is Assistant Keeper of Ancient Mesopotamian (i.e. Sumerian, Babylonian and Assyrian) script, languages and cultures Department: Middle East at the British Museum, headquartered in London's Bloomsbury. He is the curator in charge of cuneiform inscriptions on tablets of clay from ancient Mesopotamia, of which the Middle East Department has the largest collection - some 130,000 pieces - of any modern museum. This work involves reading and translating all sorts of inscriptions, sometimes working on ancient archives to identify manuscripts that belong together, or even join to one another. http://www.britishmuseum.org/the_museum/departments/staff/middle_east/irving_finkel.aspx
A serious book, but rarely a heavy one: in a sprightly, good-humoured way, Finkel communicates the thrill of true scholarship...it feels fresh and exciting here. - The Sunday Times The charged thrill of Finkel's chase permeates the book - the pages don't just join dots, they supply new pieces for a beautiful, Bronze-Age jigsaw-puzzle... Scholarly and droll, Finkel's writing is also eccentrically vivid... it is a joy. - The Times A painstaking and lively investigation ... there are remarkable scholarly insights to admire ... brilliant. - Literary Review One of the most important human documents ever discovered... his conclusions will send ripples into the world of creationism and among ark hunters. - The Guardian Finkel is a master at deciphering these ancient cuneiform clay tablets, but this book is far more than a fine piece of detective work: it is a humane work of scholarship that enlarges the soul. - The Observer Delightful...a digressive, amusing personal book for the general reader, a book that is willing to ask big questions. - The Guardian Finkel's account is wryly and entertainingly told. - The Guardian Exudes the enthusiasm of an expert deeply absorbed in his subject. - Times Literary Supplement