#GuestPost Jerold Last on the Magic of Machu Picchu


Machu Picchu, the sacred city of the Incas high in the Peruvian Andes, is used as the setting for a chapter in The Surreal Killer. It is a very special place I thought some of you might be interested in learning more about.
Conventional USA and European history of Machu Picchu: Hiram Bingham III was appointed as a lecturer in South American History at Yale University in 1907. He traveled through South America, including Peru, in 1908 and returned with Yale-sponsored expeditions to Peru in 1911, 1912, and 1915. Since The Panama Canal wasn't open until 1914, Bingham's first three visits to Peru involved difficult trips either overland or around Cape Horn and were far from being as simple as it is nowadays.
A local native of Peru, Melchor Arteaga, led the first Bingham expedition in 1911 to Machu Picchu, which had been largely ignored by the non-indigenous people of Peru at that time. With the casual racism and arrogance characteristic of the times, Bingham claimed to have discovered Machu Picchu (that it hadn't been lost to the locals and that other European explorers had been there before him apparently didn't count) and proceeded to loot the ruins, bringing back something like 40,000 different artifacts to Yale. These mummies, ceramics, bones, and other artifacts were supposed to be returned to Peru by Yale a few years ago after prolonged litigation. The switchback-filled road for tourist buses that runs from the Urubamba River to Machu Picchu is now called the Hiram Bingham Highway. Bingham himself has been suggested to be the basis for the "Indiana Jones" character in Steven Spielberg's blockbuster movies.


Incan religion:The Incas had a highly developed and sophisticated religion, which had several sacred places---Machu Picchu and Lake Titicaca are perhaps the most familiar sites to tourists nowadays. The early Incas also had to adjust to their life high in the Andes, an area of steep cliffs, huge boulders, and mountainous terrain. They made unique stone formations into special objects for worship by imbuing them with spiritual properties. These rocks were thought to possess their own spiritual forces so they were truly "gifts from the gods".

The condor represents the gods of the upper world, which included the sun, moon, stars, lightning, and rainbows. The third kind of animal the Incas deified was the snake, which represented the lower world, or inner earth. That was where the ancestors of the Incas, their great dead heroes, and the most important of their gods Pachamama, Mother of the Earth, lived.


Author Bio: The author is a Professor of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine at the University of California's Medical School at Davis. He has a Ph.D. degree in Biochemistry and does research on asthma and health effects of air pollution on the lungs. He is also a big fan of hard-boiled mystery novels. A quick search of Amazon will turn up books and articles in biochemistry previously edited or authored by Jerry, as well as his South American mystery novel series. The settings and locales for all of these novels are authentic; the author lived previously in Salta, Argentina and Montevideo, Uruguay. He has ongoing collaborations with local scientists in Uruguay, Argentina, and Peru. The Matador Murders, set in Montevideo and Santiago, Chile, is the fourth book in this series, following The Empanada Affair, set in Salta in Northwest Argentina, The Ambivalent Corpse, set in Montevideo, Uruguay and the surrounding region, and The Surreal Killer, set in Peru and Northern Chile's Atacama Desert region. All of these mystery novels are available as Kindle E-books from Amazon; the first two books are also available from Smashwords, Apple, Nook, Kobo, and most other e-book dealers. A fifth book in this series, The Body in the Parking Structure, an 11,600-word novelette set in Los Angeles, is also available from Amazon. You can learn more about Jerry and find links to all of his books on Amazon on his blog at: http://rogerandsuzannemysteries.blogs... (plus a serialized short story, "Someone Did It to the Butler" in 5 installments also posted on the blog)
Jerry writes hard-boiled mystery books that are fast moving and entertain the reader, while introducing the readers to a region where he has lived and worked that is a long way from home for most English speakers. Montevideo, Salta, Machu Picchu, and Iguazu Falls are characters in these books, and the novels portray these places as vivid and real.
Check out the blurb for The Matador Murders and find the book at Amazon.
P.I. Roger Bowman and his wife Suzanne are back in Montevideo, Uruguay after being summoned from Los Angeles by a late night phone call. One of their friends is suspected of murder and needs their skills as detectives to help clear him of the charges. Life for Roger, and especially for Suzanne, is more complicated these days as they now have an infant son, Robert. The three of them, accompanied by Robert’s nanny, Bruce, fly to Uruguay and the game is afoot. Before long we have our heroes directly in the middle of a gang war, off for a quick trip to Chile to learn all about the local crime scene, and meeting some unlikely allies in their mission. The book has lots of action, a good whodunit storyline, guest appearances from several old friends and an old enemy, and occasional opportunities for sightseeing and eating regional specialty foods.
Don't have a KINDLE?


Published on October 07, 2012 00:00
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