| In
the Courts of the Sun
by Brian D'Amato
Book Description
A mind-bending, time-bending, zeitgeist-defining
novel about the days leading up to December 21,
2012—the day the Maya predicted the world
would end.
December 21, 2012. The day time stops. Jed DeLanda,
a descendant of the Maya living in the year 2012,
is a math prodigy who spends his time playing
Go against his computer and raking in profits
from online trading. (His secret weapon? A Mayan
divination game—once used for predicting
corn-harvest cycles, now proving very useful in
predicting corn futures—that his mother
taught him.) But Jed’s life is thrown into
chaos when his former mentor, the game theorist
Taro, and a mysterious woman named Marena Park,
invite him to give his opinion on a newly discovered
Mayan codex.
Marena and Taro are looking for a volunteer to
travel back to 664 AD to learn more about a “sacrifice
game” described in the codex. Jed leaps
at the chance, and soon scientists are replicating
his brain waves and sending them through a wormhole,
straight into the mind of a Mayan king…
Only something goes wrong. Instead of becoming
a king, Jed arrives inside a ballplayer named
Chacal who is seconds away from throwing himself
down the temple steps as a human sacrifice. If
Jed can live through the next few minutes, he
might just save the world.
Bringing to mind Neal Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon
and Gary Jennings’s Aztec, yet entirely
unique, In the Courts of the Sun takes you from
the distant past to the near future in a brilliant
kaleidoscope of ideas.
Review
“In the Courts of the Sun by Brian D’Amato
is an enthralling and original read, a stunningly
inventive novel that will keep you turning the
pages until the wee hours. With the sure hand
of a master storyteller, D’Amato weaves
together Mayan history, modern science, game theory
and the coming Mayan apocalypse to deliver a gripping
read. Beware December 21, 2012!”
— Douglas Preston, author of The Codex
and The Monster of Florence
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