cover image AMONG STONE GIANTS: The Life of Katherine Routledge and Her Remarkable Expedition to Easter Island

AMONG STONE GIANTS: The Life of Katherine Routledge and Her Remarkable Expedition to Easter Island

Jo Anne Van Tilburg, Jo Anne Van Tilburg, Jo Anne Van Tilburg, , foreword by Andrew Tatham. . Scribner, $26 (351pp) ISBN 978-0-7432-4480-0

In 1914, Katherine Routledge (1866–1935) arrived at Easter Island, leading an anthropological and archeological expedition with her husband, William Scoresby Routledge, to investigate the origins of the island's mysterious giant statues. Although she made several critical discoveries about the Rapa Nui culture during her 17 months of research, the expeditionary force was wracked by internal tensions, and she found herself caught up in a native uprising led by a charismatic prophetess. Van Tilburg, a leading contemporary authority on the Easter Island statues, ably explains Routledge's findings, fitting them in the context of the adventurous chain of events, and shows how they were facilitated by her relationships with the locals. The biography is also excellent in tracing Katherine's obsessive research methods back to her childhood experiences in a wealthy English clan with a history of mental illness. Routledge struggled with symptoms of schizophrenia for most of her life, interpreting the voices in her head with a combination of her family's visionary Quakerism and a belief in communication with the dead. Though Routledge ultimately succumbed to her disease, dying alone in an insane asylum, Van Tilburg carefully shows that the symptoms were under control throughout the Easter Island expedition. Much as A Beautiful Mind did for John Nash, this biography preserves Routledge's invaluable scientific contributions without shying away from the tragic circumstances of most of the rest of her life. (Apr.)