Selected Product: | Brazilian Adventure (Marlboro Travel) Paperback Author: Peter Fleming Publisher: Marlboro Press Release Date: 1999-10-25 ISBN-10: 081016065X ISBN-13: 9780810160651 List Price: $16.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Waugh Abroad: The Collected Travel Writing (Everyman's Library) ISBN-10: 1400040760 ISBN-13: 9781400040766 List Price:$25.00 News from Tartary: A Journey from Peking to Kashmir (Marlboro Travel) ISBN-10: 0810160714 ISBN-13: 9780810160712 List Price:$16.95 In Trouble Again: A Journey Between Orinoco and the Amazon ISBN-10: 0679727140 ISBN-13: 9780679727149 List Price:$13.95 Forbidden Journey (Marlboro Travel) ISBN-10: 0810119854 ISBN-13: 9780810119857 List Price:$22.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Brazilian Adventure (Marlboro Travel) by Peter Fleming (ISBN-10: 081016065X, ISBN-13: 9780810160651). At this time we have not yet written a review for Brazilian Adventure (Marlboro Travel) by Peter Fleming (ISBN-10: 081016065X, ISBN-13: 9780810160651). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com "Beyond the completion of a 3,000-mile journey, mostly under amusing conditions, through a little-known part of the world, and the discovery of one new tributary to a tributary to a tributary of the Amazon, nothing of importance was achieved." Nothing indeed. In 1932, Peter Fleming, a literary editor (and the brother of Ian Fleming), traded his pen for a pistol to engage in the celebrated search for English adventurer Colonel P. H. Fawcett, who had gone missing in the jungles of central Brazil. With meager supplies, faulty maps, and a pack of rival newspapermen on their trail, Fleming and his companions marched, canoed, and fought through 3,000 miles of savage wilderness and alligator-ridden rivers in search of the fate of the lost colonel. One of the great adventure stories (one might even call it a ripping tale) "Brazilian Adventure" is as fresh a story today as it was when originally published in 1933. Quite charming | Customer Rating: | | This is certainly not an adventure book in the classical sense. The style of writing does not allow for it. Buy it for its British humor and charm, not for adventures which don't take place. | Somewhat entertaining | Customer Rating: | I bought this book because I am fascinated by South America, the Amazon River, etc..and also because this looked like a real life adventure book searching for clues into the dissappearance of Major Fawcett.
This book starts out slow because of the british style of writing in the early 20th century. For me it was too "flowery" and maybe that is not the right word. I nearly stopped reading the book because of it, but I didn't. Thankfully, the last half of the book, describing the race back to civilization, was much better.
This book is okay, but nowhere near great | British subtlety | Customer Rating: | | I brought this book for my Brazilian trip this past Dec. I found this book slow and boring in the beginning. This may be due to the fact that the author used lot of what I assume to be late 19th and early 20th century references which I have no idea about and the British writing. But after half way through, I learned to read past the subtle British writing and concentrate on the story and this make the book more enjoyable. | Good Old Fashion Adventure Still Works | Customer Rating: | | This is contemporary American adventure: buy an SUV, watch game shows based on Lord of the Flies, try the risotto recipe Martha Stewart used on her ascent in the Himilayas. Please! Brazilian Adventure is the real thing for those who don't own their own snowshoes. Sure, the author and his companions set off with pith helmets worthy of Ralph Lauren and more elaborate gear than they'll ever use; true, Fleming is something of a good old boy circa 1932 Oxford style. Skin to be shed. When reality hits, which it does early in the adventure and continues to the bedraggled end, he rises to the occasion. The narrative is suffused with clear-eyed wit, honesty and optimism. I hope there are other Peter Fleming books out there. |
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