Here, from award-winning writer Andrew Lawler, is what may be the worlds oldest true-life whodunit. The detective: Joan Oates, a diminutive 82-year-old grandmother, close friend of famed mystery writer Agatha Christie, and, as Lawler writes, one of the worlds most distinguished archaeologists. In Syria, shes uncovered the death pit a mass grave that gives us a radical, disturbing, and timely view into just how, where, and why we began to live in cities, trade over long distances, and, apparently, slaughter each other in large numbers.
Here, from award-winning writer Andrew Lawler, is what may be the worlds oldest true-life whodunit. The detective: Joan Oates, a diminutive 82-year-old grandmother, close friend of famed mystery writer Agatha Christie, and, as Lawler writes, one of the worlds most distinguished archaeologists. In Syria, shes uncovered the death pit a mass grave that gives us a radical, disturbing, and timely view into just how, where, and why we began to live in cities, trade over long distances, and, apparently, slaughter each other in large numbers.