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What Happens When a Modern Man Surrenders to the Stone Age? A New Memoir Answers

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What Happens When a Modern Man Surrenders to the Stone Age? A New Memoir Answers

St San Jose, CA – May 04, 2026 – In 1962, a young educator stepped off a map and into the Stone Age. His name is Laurence A. Frame. His destination: the Eastern Highlands of New Guinea, home to the Kuka-Kuka, a tribe whose reputation for headhunting descended from the Paleolithic Era. He carried no weapon. He had no handler, no film crew, no escape plan. He went alone.

“Living with New Guinea Headhunters Through a Rattled Time Machine” is the firsthand account of that journey. It is not a retrospective filtered through nostalgia. It is a visceral, moment-by-moment record of a man navigating a reality untouched by the modern world. Frame slept where they slept. He submitted to their tests, including a trial by flung stone where warriors threw rocks at him as he ran through the darkness.

The book operates on two levels. On its surface, it is a survival narrative set in one of the last uncharted places on earth. Below that, it is an examination of what happens when all external supports are stripped away. Frame had no outside authority to rely on. No embassy. No radio. No telephone. No fluent translator. Only his own capacity to observe, adapt, and endure.

Frame, a former lifeguard and educator who taught biology in Guam, walked into this situation with no formal training in anthropology. What he possessed was a stubborn respect for the people he sought to meet. He could not communicate with them in their own language. His only connection came through broken Pidgin English, a simple trade tongue that barely bridged the vast gap between their world and his. He did not come to explain them. He came to witness them. That distinction, the book argues, made survival possible.

The narrative targets readers who distrust romanticized adventure. It will appeal to those who prefer their exploration unsanitized. Fans of “The Lost City of Z” and “Into the Silence” will recognize the terrain. So will anyone who has ever questioned whether a person from one culture can genuinely connect with another.

Frame writes in tight, uncluttered prose. He does not interrupt the action to admire his own courage. He reports. The jungle is humid. The adder strikes fast. The man holding the bow does not blink. The effect is claustrophobic and immediate. You are not reading about someone else’s fear. You are inside it, experiencing what all successful writers strive to create: an evocational emotional sharing experience with your reader.

The journey does not conclude in New Guinea. Later sections of the book track Frame through Guatemala during the hunt for Che Guevara, across a shark-inhabited lake in Nicaragua, and into a Colombia still shaking from earthquake aftershocks. The final act deposits him, improbably, in a converted water tower in rural California, where an open door and two silent visitors deliver an ending no one could invent.

“Living with New Guinea Headhunters Through a Rattled Time Machine” is now available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats through Amazon, Barnes and Noble, and independent retailers worldwide.

For more information, review copies, or to schedule an interview with Laurence A. Frame, please contact:

Laurence A. Frame

About Laurence A. Frame

Laurence A. Frame taught biology in Guam, guarded swimmers on Lake Erie, and drove a Miata through Mexico long before most travelers considered it safe. He holds graduate credits in cultural anthropology from the University of Arizona and a Masters Degree in Mexican American Graduate Studies from San Jose State University. He has logged over 10,000 solo miles through Central and South America. His 1962 New Guinea expedition remains one of the only documented solo journeys into an uncontrolled tribal region by an unarmed civilian. He lives in California.

 

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