“Spooky Archaeology is a comprehensive and timely discussion of pseudoarchaeology that deserves a wide and thoughtful readership. The research is comprehensive and impressively thorough, the closely argued narrative crammed with interesting biographical insights. This well-written and welcome study dwarfs anything written previously on the subject and is bound to become a definitive source for all archaeologists to read and think about.”—Brian Fagan, Journal of Anthropological Research
“An excellent look at why we have romanticized this one science more than other fields of study. . . . It’s an outstandingly interesting subject, which has been well thought out by Card, excellently researched and very well written. It’s educational and entertaining. It takes the reader on an adventure full of professional archaeologists as well as shady characters, mysterious inscriptions, haunted museums, magical places, and continents that never were.”—Lyrae Borders, Bowling Green Daily News
“Spooky Archaeology is an important book, as public outreach in archaeology requires serious engagement with how the field is understood by non-specialists. By illustrating how archaeologists have been complicit (usually unwittingly) in reifying these problematic notions, Card convincingly explores how these approaches can undermine the discipline’s attempts at engagement from non- or anti-colonialist perspectives.”—Kevin McGeough, Reading Religion
“Spooky Archaeology excels in presenting many intriguing aspects and lesser-known details of the history of archaeology and archaeological interpretation.”—Cornelius Holtorf, American Antiquity
“Card relates ‘spooky’ themes in archaeology not only to popular understandings of archaeology and pop-culture invocations such as the Mummy movies but to the discipline’s history and practices and to its transition from more antiquarian and speculative interpretations to the modern, professionalized, science-oriented discipline of today.”—F. W. Gleach, Choice
“Spooky Archaeology is more than just a cabinet of curiosities. It also explains how those curiosities work culturally, and where they came from. In some ways it’s a social history of archaeology.”—M Harold Page, Black Gate
“An exceptional achievement and a worthy addition to the discourse on the past and future of archaeology.”—Jason Colavito, author of The Cult of Alien Gods: H. P. Lovecraft and Extraterrestrial Pop Culture
“This is a book to read and reread.”—Rob Ixer, Fortean Times
“Card’s fine book sees the relationships between the ‘spooky’ and the scientific in archaeology as not altogether antagonistic, which furthers our understanding of how people process their pasts and use them.”—Larry J. Zimmerman, author of The Sacred Wisdom of the Native Americans