Even today, the Maldives is a sparsely populated, tiny nation consisting of a few small islands, reefs, and atolls strung garland-like across the Indian Ocean, nearly a thousand kilometers to the southwest of Sri Lanka. But don't be deceived by the Maldives' size and isolation, even more than half a millennium ago. In the pages of Bin Yang's capacious Discovered but Forgotten, old Maldives comes astonishingly alive. The author provides an abundance of precise detailsall documented by reliable historical and archeological sourcesabout ships, shipwrecks, cowries, coconuts, coir ropes, dragon's spittle (ambergris), frankincense, and all manner of other exotic commodities and daily necessities, and of the people who made, used, and transported them to far-flung places around the world. This is an engrossing book, one that is hard to put aside once you dive into its oceanic depths. -- Victor Mair, coeditor of Imperial China and Its Southern Neighbours Provocative and filled with both old and new information, this is a fascinating study of an overlooked relationship. A really welcome addition to the scholarly historical literature connecting two great oceans. -- Eric Tagliacozzo, John Stambaugh Professor of History, Cornell University