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Magdalena

River of Dreams: A Story of Colombia

Audiobook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available
A captivating new book from Wade Davis—award-winning, best-selling author and National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence for more than a decade—that brings vividly to life the story of the great Río Magdalena, illuminating Colombia's complex past, present, and future
Travelers often become enchanted with the first country that captures their hearts and gives them license to be free. For Wade Davis, it was Colombia. Now in a masterly new book, Davis tells of his travels on the mighty Magdalena, the river that made possible the nation. Along the way, he finds a people who have overcome years of conflict precisely because of their character, informed by an enduring spirit of place, and a deep love of a land that is home to the greatest ecological and geographical diversity on the planet. As Gabriel García Márquez once wrote during his own pilgrimage on the river: "The only reason I would like to be young again would be the chance to travel again on a freighter going up the Magdalena." Only in Colombia can a traveler wash ashore in a coastal desert, follow waterways through wetlands as wide as the sky, ascend narrow tracks through dense tropical forests, and reach verdant Andean valleys rising to soaring ice-clad summits. This rugged and impossible geography finds its perfect coefficient in the topography of the Colombian spirit: restive, potent, at times placid and calm, in moments explosive and wild.
Both a corridor of commerce and a fountain of culture, the wellspring of Colombian music, literature, poetry, and prayer, the Magdalena has served in dark times as the graveyard of the nation. And yet, always, it returns as a river of life.
At once an absorbing adventure and an inspiring tale of hope and redemption, Magdalena gives us a rare, kaleidoscopic picture of a nation on the verge of a new period of peace. Braiding together memoir, history, and journalism, Wade Davis tells the story of the country's most magnificent river, and in doing so, tells the epic story of Colombia.
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Explorer, anthropologist, and author Wade Davis narrates this powerful appreciation of Colombia's most important river with sheer pleasure in his task. Xandra Uribe voices the occasional female in a pleasing Spanish accent, while Wade reads with Canadian pronunciations that take a little getting used to. But his numerous Spanish quotations sound authentic. He writes elegantly, and he is most eloquent in his retelling of folktales and profiling of the famous and infamous who fill this winning audiobook. Packed with local voices and stories, his text does not whitewash the decades of violence that this often politically divided country has withstood. From Simon Bolivar to Gabriel Garcia Marquez, the Spanish conquistadors, and cocaine kingpin Pablo Escobar--those featured are well described in this enjoyable audiobook. A.D.M. © AudioFile 2020, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 3, 2020
      Davis (One River), an anthropology professor at the University of British Columbia, travels the length of Colombia’s Rio Magdalena through wildly varied geographies and a past of horrific massacres, in this ardent travelogue. He visits the river’s mountainous source, where ancient native communities thrived before conquistadors exterminated them; surveys villages annihilated by a 1984 volcanic eruption that killed 25,000 people; recalls the thousands killed during drug kingpin Pablo Escobar’s 1980s reign of terror in Medellín, and the city’s rebirth as an urban-planning showcase; recounts the ordeal of farm towns trapped in the recent civil war between murderous left-wing guerrillas and even more murderous right-wing death squads; and basks in placid fishing communities in the river’s delta (site of an attack by another right-wing death squad). Along the way he views the country’s lush flora and fauna—and heartbreaking environmental damage wrought by humans—through the writings of 19th-century naturalist Alexander von Humboldt, the book’s presiding spirit, and delivers a romantic profile of revolutionary hero Simón Bolivar, a liberator turned dictator turned bitter old man. Davis stocks his lively narrative with piquant characters, dramatic historical set pieces, and lyrical nature writing (“The mouth of the Rio Magdalena is the color of the earth”). The result is a rich, fascinating study of how nature and a people shape each other.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

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  • English

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