Exploration Fawcett

by Percy Fawcett, Brian Fawcett (Editor)

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This collection of the explorer's own writings presents a "tale of great a stirring and sensitive record, well written by a true explorer" (The New York Times). In 1925, the legendary British explorer Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett disappeared in the unexplored territory of Brazil's Mato Grosso. For ten years he had wandered the forests and death-filled rivers in search of a fabled "lost" city. Finally, convinced that he had discovered the location, he set out for the last time with two show more companions, one of whom was his eldest son, to destination "Z," never to be heard from again. While Fawcett's story was made famous by the book and feature film The Lost City of Z, this thrilling account of his adventures is told in his own riveting words. Exploration Fawcett was compiled by his younger son from the explorer's manuscripts, letters, and logbooks. What happened to him after remains a mystery. show less

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apokoliptian Comics adaptation of the real life adventurer
DuncanHill The story of an expedition to find Fawcett

Member Reviews

4 reviews
An astonishing read, much seeming if not first hand experience, making this a great first hand source and account. Because of this the telling is linear - no bouncing back and forth in time and place. The story begins with his first assignment as a cartographer to help determine a boundary in South America, and then goes to other assignments doing same for others. A very good way into the book there start to be ethnographic and geo political, the in even smaller scale nuances that seem to provoke the author that there is 'something there' that academics of his time had not imagined. Some astute observations of the vile corruption of the times and inhumanity to man, with the native peoples always losing, struck me many times how unfunny show more (and how that still happens) because of resources and greed. So it is far more than a put this foot in front of the other Indiana Jones fiction - this person has a conscience and compassion, no two dimensional character here, and in many places almost advocates for intoxicating and .enlightening aspects of native tribes and peoples. So be prepared to learn a little if not a lot very unpleasant history regarding the rubber trade and colonial slavery.

Any way, the Lost City of Z doesn't come into the book until about the final quarter. No mention at all until then. Keep in mind that historically what was happening in the archeological world with the Maya, Egypt, Babylon, Minoan Crete, the crazes, the times... who knows what? maybe a lost world?

I found the book a compelling account of his thoughts, his times, his travels, interests, personality. It functions as an anthropological work while retaining honest there at the times adventure. The historical character and understanding you can gain into a small part of the South American 'games of money and thrones' and it's impact on today should not be minimized.

Well worth taking the time to read on many levels.
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a must read for any husband, answering the age old question: How do I get away from my wife? It is simple, go to the Amazon basin, go again, go again, go again, go again, go again, make up a theory and go again
A neat companion to "The Lost City of Z", but I think it might have been hard to follow if I hadn't read that one first.
En 1925, tras años de aventuras en Asia y Latinoamérica, el explorador inglés Percy Harrison Fawcett desapareció en las selvas del norte de Brasil en pos de un sueño: encontrar una civilización perdida, heredera de la Atlántida, a la que llamaba 'Z'. A raíz de su desaparición, se organizaron numerosas expediciones en su búsqueda, pero ninguna tuvo éxito. Fawcett se convirtió en una de las mayores leyendas del siglo XX.Sus viajes y su personalidad inspiraron obras como El mundo perdido, de Conan Doyle, o Las minas del rey Salomón, de H. Rider Haggard. Steven Spielberg se basó en él para crear Indiana Jones. El libro reproduce sus propios manuscritos y cartas, recopilados y editados por su hijo.

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Picture of author.
5+ Works 336 Members
Editor
6 Works 349 Members

Some Editions

Fritz-Crone, Pelle (Translator)
Hanbury-Tenison, Robin (Introduction)
Kivimies, Yrjö (Translator)
Moberg, Olle (Translator)
Sachs, Robin (Narrator)
Schaap, H.W.J. (Translator)

Series

Belongs to Publisher Series

Common Knowledge

Original publication date
1953
People/Characters
Percy Fawcett
Important places
Brazil; Bolivia; Lost City of Z, Matto Grosso, Brazil
Dedication
The lot of the one left behind is ever the harder. Because of that—because she as my partner in everything shared with me the burden of the work recorded in these pages—this book is dedicated to my wife "CHEEKY"
First words
"What a story!" (Prologue)
When Diego Alvarez struggled landwards through the Atlantic swell in a welter of wreckage from the disintegrating caravel, it was to land, exhausted, on a shore absolutely unknown to this sixteenth-century Portuguese.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)On the contrary, her practical help and constant encouragement have been big factors in the successes so far gained, and if I win in the end the triumph will be largely due to her.
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)That the cities exist I know... (Epilogue)
Original language
English
Disambiguation notice
Exploration Fawcett is the UK title. Lost Trails, Lost Cities is the US title.

Classifications

Genres
Anthropology, Nonfiction, Travel, Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
918.1History & geographyGeography & travelGeography of and travel in South AmericaBrazil
LCC
F3313 .F3Local History of the United States, Canada and Latin AmericaLatin America. Spanish AmericaSouth AmericaBolivia
BISAC

Statistics

Members
332
Popularity
95,144
Reviews
4
Rating
(3.97)
Languages
8 — English, Finnish, French, German, Hungarian, Norwegian (Bokmål), Spanish, Swedish
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
19
ASINs
18