The Man Who Found Troy
In the realm of archaeology no exploit is more remarkable than that of Heinrich Schliemann, a born linguist who rolled up a big fortune as an exporter and who then proceeded to confound the scholars by tracking down the site of Troy and the treasures of Mycenae. C. W. CERAM tells the Schliemann story in fresh detail in his book, Gods, Graves and Scholars, which will be published by Alfred Knopf this autumn. Mr. Ceram, a German critic and publisher, was in 1915 editor of The World, a British-sponsored newspaper in Hamburg, and is today editor of Rowohlt Verlag, the Hamburg publishers.