This discovery in a 1992 book will be old hat to a few of you, but I thought it worth passing on. It's no secret that Joe Goodman, Twain's Virginia City editor in the early 1860s, eventually worked on the Maya inscriptions. I had read brief, dismissive accounts of Goodman's contributions in a couple of books. But yesterday I was reading Michael D. Coe's excellent BREAKING THE MAYA CODE (Thames and Hudson, 1992) and came on 3 pages devoted to Goodman, plus several passing mentions. To me, Coe's book is a model of accessible scholarship--even-handed. clearly written, human, very accessible to the lay reader. His subject is as much the code-breakers as the Maya glyphs themselves. Coe's work is a history of interesting and quirky personalities, feuds, misdirections, etc. Coe raps Goodman's knuckles gently for claiming a breakthrough that he thinks Goodman knew very well had been achieved by an earlier German researcher. But he then goes on to say that Joseph Goodman has never received the credit he deserves for being the first to work out that 19 Maya glyphs were the exact equivalents of a 1-through-19 bar and dot numbering system also used by the Maya. (A crude equivalent would be the future archaeologist who discovers that the mysterious words "eight," "fourteen" etc. were simply another way we had of recording "8," "14," etc.) Much more important--though his work was laughed off at the time--Goodman was the first to match the enormously elaborate Maya calendar with the Western calendar: Until a paper Joe published in 1905, scholars had no way to equate the Maya date of any event with a date like 872 A.D. Coe's pages (mainly pp. 111-115) include a good Twain Autobiography quote about Goodman, and (as cited from Paine's biography), Goodman's final wisecrack at his late friend's expense: "I am grieved--and yet glad that Mark made so good an ending. God knows how mortally afraid I was that somebody would land him in a dime museum before the finish." I never cease to enjoy the odd twists lives can take. Goodman was a Virginia City and San Francisco editor who went on to become a grower of raisins in Fresno. Then, in the 1880s, his interests turned to the Maya. Mark Coburn