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Paperback Through the Brazilian Wilderness - An Epic Adventure of the Roosevelt-Rondon Scientific Expedition: Organization and Members of the Expedition, Cooper Book

ISBN: 8027334535

ISBN13: 9788027334537

Through the Brazilian Wilderness - An Epic Adventure of the Roosevelt-Rondon Scientific Expedition: Organization and Members of the Expedition, Cooper

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

This book is an account of a zoo-geographic reconnaissance through the Brazilian hinterland. In 1914 Theodore Roosevelt with his son, Kermit and Colonel Rondon traveled to South America on a quest to course the River of Doubt. In the body of this book Roosevelt describes how the scope of the expedition was enlarged, and how it was given a geographic as well as a zoological character. The Roosevelt-Rondon Scientific Expedition had experienced great...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Text is printed in microtype. HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT! IMPOSSIBLE TO READ IT!

I was very excited to find this book and couldn't have been more disappointed. It is printed in teeny tiny typeface! Totally disappointing. I had really looked forward to reading this account of President Teddy Roosevelt's Brazilian Expedition. SAVE YOUR MONEY. NOT WORTH IT.

Great book; but break out your magnifying glass….

The writing is great. Unfortunately, the publication leaves much to be desired. It’s printed in roughly 5 point font, and each page is from top to bottom with sentences, and very few spaces to denote separate paragraphs. Buy the book, but pick another publication. This one is painful to read.

Great Writing, Great Adventure

TR's account of his expedition to explore the River of Doubt shows a lot of the reasons we still admire him. First, he was a serious scientist. He was dedicated to discovering new species of wildlife (and could rattle off their Latin names with the best of them), mapping unknown stretches of river, and observing the ways of foreign lands. We know TR as a physical character and often forget what a highly intelligent man he was.Second, his writing is greatly under-appreciated. He doesn't breeze over his descriptions of wildlife or the landscape--it's pretty technical stuff--but he does it clearly and concisely. As someone who has labored through countless pedantic textbooks, I took comfort in his words, "Ability to write well, if the writer had nothing to write about, entitles him to mere derision. But the greatest thought is robbed of an immense proportion of its value if expressed in a mean or obscure manner."Third, despite the above, he could still endure enormous physical hardship at an old age. Battling rapids, hauling canoes, fighting disease, and hunting game, TR had the combination of brawn and intelligence that's seriously lacking in our leaders today, especially the lightweight that now sits behind TR's desk.This book is also a great window into a time and place forever lost to history. TR's writing projects a clear photo in your mind of undiscovered wilderness and great adventure.

An excellent narration of T.R.'s sometimes perilous journey

T.R. was writing was very gradiloquent, and this book really gives readers a good example of this. Read about the journey that ended with T.R. having a river named after him (Rio Duvida renamed to the current Rio Roosevelt), and gave him the sickness that would eventually lead to his death less than five years later.
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