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The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon (Vintage Departures) |  | Author: David Grann Publisher: Vintage Category: Book
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Seller: value_booksellers Rating: 293 reviews Sales Rank: 1049
Media: Paperback Edition: 1 Reprint Pages: 448 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.1 x 1
ISBN: 1400078458 Dewey Decimal Number: 918.11046 EAN: 9781400078455 ASIN: 1400078458
Publication Date: January 26, 2010 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review Amazon Exclusive: John Grisham Reviews The Lost City of Z Since first publishing A Time to Kill in 1988, John Grisham has written twenty novels and one work of nonfiction, The Innocent Man. His second novel, The Firm, spent 47 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, becoming the bestselling novel of 1991. The success of The Pelican Brief, which hit number one on the New York Times bestseller list, and The Client, which debuted at number one, confirmed Grisham's reputation as the master of the legal thriller. His most recent novel, The Associate, was published in January 2009. Read his exclusive Amazon guest review of The Lost City of Z: In April of 1925, a legendary British explorer named Percy Fawcett launched his final expedition into the depths of the Amazon in Brazil. His destination was the lost city of El Dorado, the “City of Gold,” an ancient kingdom of great sophistication, architecture, and culture that, for some reason, had vanished. The idea of El Dorado had captivated anthropologists, adventurers, and scientists for 400 years, though there was no evidence it ever existed. Hundreds of expeditions had gone looking for it. Thousands of men had perished in the jungles searching for it. Fawcett himself had barely survived several previous expeditions and was more determined than ever to find the lost city with its streets and temples of gold. The world was watching. Fawcett, the last of the great Victorian adventurers, was financed by the Royal Geographical Society in London, the world’s foremost repository of research gathered by explorers. Fawcett, then age 57, had proclaimed for decades his belief in the City of Z, as he had nicknamed it. His writings, speeches, and exploits had captured the imagination of millions, and reports of his last expedition were front page news. His expeditionary force consisted of three men--himself, his 21-year-old son Jack, and one of Jack’s friends. Fawcett believed that only a small group had any chance of surviving the horrors of the Amazon. He had seen large forces decimated by malaria, insects, snakes, poison darts, starvation, and insanity. He knew better. He and his two companions would travel light, carry their own supplies, eat off the land, pose no threat to the natives, and endure months of hardship in their search for the Lost City of Z. They were never seen again. Fawcett’s daily dispatches trickled to a stop. Months passed with no word. Because he had survived several similar forays into the Amazon, his family and friends considered him to be near super-human. As before, they expected Fawcett to stumble out of the jungle, bearded and emaciated and announcing some fantastic discovery. It did not happen. Over the years, the search for Fawcett became more alluring than the search for El Dorado itself. Rescue efforts, from the serious to the farcical, materialized in the years that followed, and hundreds of others lost their lives in the search. Rewards were posted. Psychics were brought in by the family. Articles and books were written. For decades the legend of Percy Fawcett refused to die. The great mystery of what happened to Fawcett has never been solved, perhaps until now. In 2004, author David Grann discovered the story while researching another one. Soon, like hundreds before him, he became obsessed with the legend of the colorful adventurer and his baffling disappearance. Grann, a lifelong New Yorker with an admitted aversion to camping and mountain climbing, a lousy sense of direction, and an affinity for take-out food and air conditioning, soon found himself in the jungles of the Amazon. What he found there, some 80 years after Fawcett’s disappearance, is a startling conclusion to this absorbing narrative. The Lost City of Z is a riveting, exciting and thoroughly compelling tale of adventure. (Photo © Maki Galimberti) A Q&A with Author David Grann  Question: When did you first stumble upon the story of Percy Fawcett and his search for an ancient civilization in the Amazonâand when did you realize this particular story had you in “the grip”? David Grann: While I was researching a story on the mysterious death of the world’s greatest Sherlock Holmes expert, I came upon a reference to Fawcett’s role in inspiring Arthur Conan Doyle’s novel The Lost World. Curious, I plugged Fawcett’s name into a newspaper database and was amazed by the headlines that appeared, including “THREE MEN FACE CANNIBALS IN RELIC QUEST” and tribesmen “Seize Movie Actor Seeking to Rescue Fawcett.” As I read each story, I became more and more curious--about how Fawcett’s quest for a lost city and his disappearance had captivated the world; how for decades hundreds of scientists and explorers had tried to find evidence of Fawcett’s missing party and the City of Z; and how countless seekers had disappeared or died from starvation, diseases, attacks by wild animals, or poisonous arrows. What intrigued me most, though, was the notion of Z. For years most scientists had considered the brutal conditions in the largest jungle in the world inimical to humankind, but more recently some archeologists had begun to question this longstanding view and believed that a sophisticated civilization like Z might have existed. Such a discovery would challenge virtually everything that was believed about the nature of the Amazon and what the Americas looked liked before the arrival of Christopher Columbus. Suddenly, the story had every tantalizing element--mystery, obsession, death, madness--as well as great intellectual stakes. Still, I probably didn’t realize I was fully in the story’s “grip” until I told my wife that I planned to take out an extra life insurance policy and follow Fawcett’s trail into the Amazon. Q: Tell us about the discovery of Fawcett’s previously unpublished diaries and logbooks. DG: Researching the book often felt like a kind of treasure hunt and nothing was more exciting than coming across these materials in an old chest in the house of one of Fawcett’s grandchildren. Fawcett, who had been a British spy, was extremely secretive about his search for Z--in part because he didn’t want his rivals to discover the lost city before he did and in part because he feared that too many people would die if they tried to follow in his wake. These old, crumbling diaries and logbooks held incredible clues to both Fawcett’s life and death; what’s more, they revealed a key to his clandestine route to the Lost City of Z. Q: In an attempt to retrace Fawcett’s journey, many scientists and explorers have faced madness, kidnapping, and death. Did you ever hesitate to go to the Amazon? DG: I probably should have been more hesitant, especially after reading some of the diaries of members of other parties that had scoured the Amazon for a lost city. One seeker of El Dorado described reaching a state of “privation so great that we were eating nothing but leather, belts and soles of shoes, cooked with certain herbs, with the result that so great was our weakness that we could not remain standing.” In that expedition alone, some four thousand men perished. Other explorers resorted to cannibalism. One searcher went so mad he stabbed his own child, whispering, “Commend thyself to God, my daughter, for I am about to kill thee.” But to be honest, even after reading these accounts, I was so consumed by the story that I did not think much about the consequences--and one of the themes I try to explore in the book is the lethal nature of obsession. Q: When you were separated from your guide Paolo on the way to the Kuikuro village and seemingly lost and alone in the jungle, what was going through your mind? DG: Besides fear, I kept wondering what the hell I was doing on such a mad quest. Q: Paolo and you made a game of imagining what happened to Fawcett in the Amazon. Without giving anything away about The Lost City of Z, I was wondering if you came away with any final conclusions? DG: I don’t want to give too much away; but, after poring over Fawcett’s final letters and dispatches from the expedition and after interviewing many of the tribes that Fawcett himself had encountered, I felt as if I had come as close as possible to knowing why Fawcett and his party vanished. Q: In his praise for your book, Malcolm Gladwell asks a “central question of our age”: “In the battle between man and a hostile environment, who wins?” Obviously, the jungle has won many times, but it seems man may be gaining. What are your thoughts on the deforestation taking place in the Amazon? DG: It is a great tragedy. Over the last four decades in Brazil alone, the Amazon has lost some two hundred and seventy thousand square miles of its original forest cover--an area bigger than France. Many tribes, including some I visited, are being threatened with extinction. Countless animals and plants, many of them with potential medicinal purposes, are also vanishing. One of the things that the book explores is how early Native American societies were often able to overcome their hostile environment without destroying it. Unfortunately, that has not been the case with the latest wave of trespassers. Q: You began this journey as a man who doesn’t like to camp and has “a terrible sense of direction and tend[s] to forget where [you are] on the subway and miss[es] [your] stop in Brooklyn.” Are you now an avid outdoorsman? DG: No. Once was enough for me! Q: Early in the book, you write, “Ever since I was young, I’ve been drawn to mystery and adventure tales.” What have been some of your favorite books--past and present--that fall into this category? DG: I’m a huge Sherlock Holmes fan, and every few years go back and read the stories again. I do the same with many of Joseph Conrad’s novels, including Lord Jim. I’m always amazed at how he produced quest novels that reflected the Victorian era and yet seem to have been written with the wisdom of a historian looking back in time. As for more contemporary authors, I read a lot of crime fiction, especially the works of George Pelecanos and Michael Connelly. I also relish books, such as Jonathan Lethem’s Motherless Brooklyn, that cleverly play with this genre. Finally, there are the gripping yarns written by authors like Jon Krakauer and Nathaniel Philbrick-âstories that are all the more spellbinding because they are true. Q: Brad Pitt and Paramount optioned The Lost City of Z in the spring. Any updates? DG: They have hired a screenwriter and director and seem to be moving forward at a good clip. Q: What are you working on now? DG: I recently finished a couple of crime stories for The New Yorker, including one about a Polish author who allegedly committed murder and then left clues about the real crime in his novel. Meanwhile, I’m hoping to find a tantalizing story, like The Lost City of Z, that will lead to a new book. Q: Anything else you’d like to add? DG: Just that I hope that readers will enjoy The Lost City of Z and find the story of Fawcett and his quest as captivating as I did. (Photo © Matt Richman) Look Inside The Lost City of Z Click on thumbnails for larger images | | |  | | Percy Harrison Fawcett was considered “the last of the individualist explorers”âthose who ventured into blank spots on the map with little more than a machete, a compass, and an almost divine sense of purpose. He is seen here in 1911, the year of his fourth major Amazon expedition. (Copyright © R. de Montet-Guerin) | Fawcett mapping the frontier between Brazil and Bolivia in 1908. (Courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society) | Dr. Alexander Hamilton Rice, Fawcett’s main rival, was a multimillionaire “as much at home in the elegant swirl of Newport society as in the steaming jungles of Brazil.” (Courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society) | A member of Dr. Rice’s 1919-20 expedition deploys a wireless telegraphy setâan early radioâallowing the party to receive news from the outside world. (Courtesy of the Royal Geographical Society) |
Product Description A New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, and Denver Post Bestseller In 1925, the legendary British explorer Percy Fawcett ventured into the Amazon jungle, in search of a fabled civilization. He never returned. Over the years countless perished trying to find evidence of his party and the place he called “The Lost City of Z.” In this masterpiece of narrative nonfiction, journalist David Grann interweaves the spellbinding stories of Fawcett’s quest for “Z” and his own journey into the deadly jungle, as he unravels the greatest exploration mystery of the twentieth century.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 293
Past and Present Meet in the Amazon Jungle July 19, 2010 Gregg Eldred (Avon Lake, OH USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
It may seem that there are no longer unexplored areas of the planet. Less than a century ago, however, the Amazon was one of the last, great areas that remained mysterious. Perhaps it was because it was jungle, a green space so dense that few had ever dared to explore it. While it is true that many used the rivers that fed the Amazon River, not many left the river for the interior. In 1906, British explorer Percy Fawcett, who was affiliated with the British Royal Geographic Society, which was in the midst of mapping the world, was given the task of mapping the border between Bolivia and Brazil. Nearly a year later, Fawcett emerged from the jungle, gaunt but extremely happy. He loved the jungle; while it was menacing, it also afforded him solitude. Much like an addiction, he continued to return to the Amazon as it consumed his every waking hour. Until 1925, when he left on an adventure to discover the city he christened Z. Then it turned fatal. David Grann details Fawcett's obsession, and his own, in The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon.
Contents: Preface; We Shall Return; The Vanishing; The Search Begins; Buried Treasure; Blank Spots on the Map; The Disciple; Freeze-Dried Ice Cream and Adrenaline Socks; Into the Amazon; The Secret Papers; The Green Hell; Dead Horse Camp; In the Hands of the Gods; Ransom; The Case for Z; El Dorado; The Locked Box; The Whole World is Mad; A Scientific Obsession; An Unexpected Clue; Have No Fear; The Last Eyewitness; Dead or Alive; The Colonel's Bones; The Other World; Z; Acknowledgements; A Note on the Sources; Notes; Selected Bibliography; Index
David Grann tells two stories in The Lost City of Z; one story concerns an explorer chasing a dream, the other is a reporter chasing the explorer chasing the dream. On one hand you witness Fawcett attempting to raise funds for his adventure, which was not a very popular quest. On the other hand, there is a reporter from New York City who doesn't like to camp, has never climbed a mountain or hunted, and yet feels the need to follow in Fawcett's footsteps in order to determine the fate of "the last of the great Victorian explorers who ventured into uncharted realms with little more than a machete, a compass and an almost divine sense of purpose." It is an interesting and compelling narrative. When focusing on Fawcett, the reader discovers the bigotry and racism prevalent in British adventurers of the time, the fate of explorers searching for Fawcett, the deadly flora and fauna of the Amazon, and the myths of El Dorado.
When Grann begins to chart his adventure, he uses Google Maps. To prepare for the Amazon, he visits an outdoors store in New York City, picking up many high technology devices, clothing, and equipment. It is a humorous endeavor, one that reminds the reader that we have access to equipment that was unknown to Fawcett in 1925. However, the jungle is no less dangerous in our time. The final chapters read like a penny press novel, gripping and exciting. Grann follows his subject to a remote region called Xingu, where he is introduced to a person that was likely the last to see Fawcett alive. He also believes that he has found the remains of Z.
The Lost City of Z: A Tale of Deadly Obsession in the Amazon makes the current world seem very small. By revealing real adventurers, blazing trails with machetes, compass, and will, the world at that time seemed limitless. Now, using Google, GPS, and satellite phones, the world seems much smaller. Grann's adventure is neither a disappointment to him nor the reader. While Fawcett's story is nearly a century old, Grann follows it very well, through all of the ups and downs, twists and turns. The Lost City of Z is an extremely well researched, fascinating and thrilling experience.
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A Thrilling Adventure July 14, 2010 Anthony (New York, USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
David Grann remarks that one of the common strains in his writing is obsession. In The Lost City of Z Grann gives us a biographical and anthropological history of Colonel Perry Fawcett's expeditions, said to be the inspiration for Arthur Conan Doyle's The Lost World. The world of Fawcett is delightfully recounted through the views of some of his contemporaries such as biologist James Murrary. Fawcett had quite an interesting expedition with the renowned Arctic explorer Murrary, whose body eventually became infested by maggots.
All adventure aside this book combines biography, adventure, science, and Grann's own personal narrative into one gripping tale about the last frontier on Earth. Grann's writing is simple and punchy. What ties the whole book together is Grann's own descent into madness and his obsession with finding out what happened to Fawcett. In the end we find that archeologist Michael Heckenberger's work might prove that Fawcett's quest for Z was not so crazy after all.
Intriguing Tale of Lost Civilizations, Exploration, and Death July 10, 2010 Daniel Murphy (Redmond, OR USA) David Grann's book about "they don't make `em like that anymore" British explorer Percy Fawcett's attempt to find a fabled Amazon Basin "Lost City of Z" is a worthy read for several reasons. Using a self-effacing and good humored style, Grann gifts the reader with a clear and fascinating review of a human tradition that may have ended with Percy Fawcett's death (circa 1925): a man with a compass and spartan supplies sets out at incredible personal risk to explore uncharted (literally) territory, hoping to find evidence of a mighty civilization that has been lost to history. Even as minimally equipped Fawcett headed into the jungle with his son and his son's best friend to find the Lost City of Z, competitors were setting out using technological and logistical brute force, including the use of short-wave radio and amphibious airplanes. Residents of the 21st century, routinely equipped with cell phones with GPS that fix one's place on the planet to within 10 feet, might have a difficult time imagining the enormous audacity of the Fawcett-led trio of men setting of on foot against deadly adversaries that ranged in size from the microbial (malaria, yellow fever, serious fungal infections) to the mid-sized (piranhas, poisonous snakes, jaguars) to the full sized and most deadly of all: indigenous humans defending their territory with poison-tipped arrows. MIGHT have a difficult time imagining, were it not for the lucid and engaging prose of the author.
Grann's personal journey to the Amazon to find out what happened to the Fawcett expedition did not, as did many other expeditions with the same purpose, add to the death total of a hundred or so seekers before him. Grann lives to tell his tale of life in contemporary Amazonia, and enriches the reader with current archeological research that provides tantalizing clues about a widespread and highly civilized people that thrived in the Amazon basin, a people just now coming into the archeological limelight. A more thorough exploration of this lost civilization can be found in 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus.
Where does The Lost City of Z fit in with the best chronicles of men taking on Nature against virtually impossible odds? Not at the top, but despite this it is both truly enjoyable and satisfyingly informative. Tales that stagger one's credulity, including Apsley Cherry-Garrard's tale of South Pole adversity, The Worst Journey in the World, and Alfred Lansing's Antartica account of Endurance: Shackleton's Incredible Voyage, will forever dominate any such list. The Lost City of Z is closer kin to the recent The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey, about Teddy Roosevelt's near death brush with Amazonian exploration, a fascinating tale that all Amazonaphiles should put on their To Be Read list.
The Lost City of Z is intriguing on multiple levels, and highly recommended for those with a hankering to explore remote corners of the world without risking malaria, poisonous snake bites, ending up as fish food to a frenzy of piranhas, or on the wrong end of a venomous blow-dart. What about those English gentlemen (e.g. Fawcett) that preferred the more hands on approach? Doubt their sanity, but never their nearly miraculous survival skills, nor their diamantine courage.
Amazing Journey July 8, 2010 Andrew G. Gilbertson I got this book because I LOVE stories about lost cities, adventurers, explorers, and jungles. And I pretty much was NOT disappointed by the book at all. I saw the cover and pretty much it was 'must have' at first sight!:) It read beautifully and even though it was loaded with plenty of fact David Grann always kept it flowing at a really nice narrative pace. It's the kind of book that feels like a guilty pleasure fiction-novel but is in reality an extremely educational non-fiction journey that captivated and affected not just Percy Fawcett's life, but the lives of his family and the people that would read about him far far into the future.
The ONE downside was that the book was so good that it sucked when it was over. :)
A Good Expedition, Coulda Been Great June 26, 2010 Paul Flanigan (West Sacramento, CA USA) 2 out of 3 found this review helpful
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R2AQ7UKWRQ6G2H My video review of "Lost City of Z." I talk about what was great and where I feel the book struggled. Enjoy.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 293
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