Matthew Restall was educated at Oxford and UCLA. He is now Edwin Erle Sparks Professor of History and Anthropology, and Director of Latin American Studies, at Penn State University. A recent president of the American Society for Ethnohistory, he edits the Hispanic American Historical Review and book series with Cambridge University and Penn State presses. His one hundred publications on three fields of Latin American history-Yucatan and the Maya; Africans in Spanish America; and the Spanish Conquest-include The Maya World; Maya Conquistador; Seven Myths of the Spanish Conquest; The Black Middle; 2012 and the End of the World; The Conquistadors; and When Montezuma Met Cortes: The True Story of the Meeting Than Changed History. His forthcoming books include histories of the Maya town of Ixil and of early Belize. Amara Solari was educated at the University of California at Berkeley and at Santa Barbara. She is now Associate Professor of Art History and Anthropology at Penn State University. She is the author of three books, 2012 and the End of the World: The Western Roots of the Maya Apocalypse (co-authored with Matthew Restall in 2011), Maya Ideologies of the Sacred: The Transfiguration of Space in Colonial Yucatan (2013), and the forthcoming Idolizing Mary: Maya-Christian Icons in Early Modern Yucatan (2019). She has published in The Art Bulletin, Ethnohistory, and the Hispanic American Historical Review of which she is currently a senior editor. Her latest book project is a material, iconographic, and spatial study of the extant corpus of Maya Christian murals in Yucatan.