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Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush

Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold RushAuthor: Marc Herman
Publisher: Nan A. Talese
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy New: $4.25
as of 5/21/2012 00:34 MDT details
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Seller: shekinah_books_and_media
Sales Rank: 2,185,658

Languages: English (Unknown), English (Original Language), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1
Pages: 272
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.6 x 6 x 0.9

ISBN: 0385502524
EAN: 9780385502528
ASIN: 0385502524

Publication Date: February 18, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Also Available In:

  • Hardcover - Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush
  • Paperback - Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush
  • Hardcover - SEARCHING FOR EL DORADO: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush
  • Kindle Edition - Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
The search for the lost City of Gold in the Amazon basin has inspired adventurers since the days of the Spanish conquistadors and Sir Walter Raleigh. Intrigued by the cultural, economic, and environmental fallout of a five-hundred-year gold rush, journalist Marc Herman traveled to the rainforests of Guyana, where he joined up with a rowdy crew of local gold-miners as they pursued their dreams of riches.

In an adventure-filled narrative rich with humor and empathy, Herman brings to life the group of miners. They are independent prospectors who wear all their earnings on their fingers and around their necks -- their bank accounts are oversized rings and huge gold necklaces. But yards away from the mines where these men seek their fortunes with techniques reminiscent of California’s forty-niners -- dynamite, tin pans, and wooden sluices -- there are mines run by international corporations that fail to alleviate the area’s poverty despite their tremendous technological and political power.

Searching for El Dorado is an astonishing achievement, a lively, humor-filled adventure full of colorful people and incidents wrapped around an eye-opening look at the contemporary colonialism that is enough to make you question the value of gold.


Amazon.com Review
When we think of the Amazonian rain forest, the term gold rush does not immediately spring to mind, nor does the latter summon up thoughts of late-20th-century Guyana. In Searching for El Dorado: A Journey into the South American Rainforest on the Tail of the World's Largest Gold Rush, Marc Herman recasts our presuppositions with a fascinating story of adventure and commercialism in post-colonial Guyana. Asking how a country so rich in precious natural resources could remain so impoverished, Herman draws on his acute observation and narrative élan to tell this complex story of fierce competition, environmentalism, history, and journalistic inquiry. "If Guyana was not benefiting from its gold because outsiders were taking it all," he writes, "if Omai was just 16th-century mercantilism promoted as 21st-century globalism--then at least the foreign robber barons should be rich. But they weren't; somehow gold was turning to smoke."

Herman speaks with the precision of a journalist and the ease of a novelist, assembling a cast of marvelous personalities to describe the conditions and consequences that converge to keep Guyana among the poorest of Caribbean countries, despite the existence of gold and diamonds within its boundaries. Wisely, Herman does not advance a personal agenda. Instead, he gives a voice, in breathtaking detail, to the different constituencies that comprise this world of colorful local prospectors, foreign businessmen, and everyday people. Like the prospectors in Guyana, Herman too is on a quest--not to strip the land of gold, but rather to tell this little-known and wonderful story. --Silvana Tropea


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