I've always been fascinated by Archaeology - the reading of what is left in the Earth to tell our history. This book suggests that it is going to show how those ruins and leftovers, hidden under centuries of subsequent civilisations, show that the stories of the Bible had a basis in fact - even if that fact has become slightly distorted over time - sometimes on purpose, sometimes just by accident as people tried to re-interpret the stories of the previous generations. But like other Pellegrino books, it is so much more. It touches on war, the evolution of life on Earth, the deign of robots, intersteller travel and the history of one of the most fought over bits of real estate on the Earth. There is so much here that it's hard to give a synopsis that really does it justice.
A lot of the book is about the volcanic eruption of Thera, which was on such a scale that it changed the course of human civilisation. Giving rise to the legend of Atlantis, the plagues of Egypt, caused the Biblical Exodus, and was the inspiration behind hundreds of our legends that were passed down before the written word. It's utterly fascinating.
The story of Noah and his Ark also comes under scrutiny, focusing on the river lands where a major flood would have swamped the flat area from horizon to horizon - to the people that lived and farmed there, it was as if their whole world was under water ... and would have attempted to flee by loading their precious farm animals onto rafts.
Of course, this is all theory - but to me anyway, it all holds together. And the author comes across as being impartial, highly knowledgeable and with a huge amount of friends just as clever as he is. A confirmed agnostic, he even comes round to discussing what the nature of God might actually be and whether it can be a name given to any of the forces that have been in action since the Big Bang ... and maybe before.
Not the lightest of reads, but highly recommend it.