Several months ago I highlighted Endurance. It was an epic battle of man against nature. At the time, Brad suggested I read The River of Doubt, by Candice Millard. It is a riveting story centering around Theodore Roosevelt's journey down an unexplored river through the Amazon jungles of Brazil in 1914. The expedition was led by Candido Mariano da Salva Rondon, one of Brazil's greatest heroes.
You would think that battling the jungle would be stressful enough, but they also had to contend with a murderer in their midst. Roosevelt's description of the piranaha makes me shiver. He writes, "The head with it's short muzzle, staring malignant eyes, and gaping, cruelly armed jaws, is the embodiment of evil ferocity; and the actions of the fish exactly match its looks."
There is another description of a tiny, almost transparent catfish known as the candiru. They are only about an inch long, and survive solely on blood. They feed in the gill chambers of larger fish, and drop off after having eaten their fill. However, they can be lethal to humans in the wrong circumstances. Candice Millard describes the following:
"In this case, however, the victim reported that, just before the attack, he had been standing in a river urinating, but the water had reached only to his upper thighs, and his penis had not even touched the river, much less been submerged in it. The candiru, he claimed, had abruptly leapt out of the water, shimmied up his urine stream, and disappeared into his urethra. He had made a desperate lunge for the fish, but it was too fast and too slippery. The incident occurred in a small town more than a hundred miles from Manaos, and the local doctors had been at a loss to help the man. By the time he was finally moved to Manaos for treatment, he had been unable to urinate for more than a week, and his stomach has become so distended that he looked six months pregnant. The doctor who eventually operated on him was able to successfully remove the candiru--without resorting to amputation."
Roosevelt survived the journey, but just barely. Through the latter part of the journey bacterial infections and malaria made an almost lethal combination. He never completely regained his health, and died just four years later at the age of 60.
This book is primarily a tribute to Roosevelt. He was a man of courage and iron discipline. As a child he was plagued by asthma, but used harsh physical exercise to conquor his weaknesses. He followed this formula for the rest of his life, and after major setbacks or disappointments, would often retreat into great adventures and will himself to prevail.
Like Endurance, this is a study of leadership. Rondon lead this journey, and Roosevelt would defer to his decisions, but sometimes there would be heated exchanges. The two men had great respect for one another, and after returning to the states, Roosevelt called Rondon one of the four most accomplished explorers of his day.
I have purposely not commented on the good parts. Otherwise, why would you want to read it?
4 comments:
Rod
Thanks for the props on this text. I was inspired to take on new challenges as a result of this text. The prose is delightful.
My newest reading adventures:
a. my son is 10 years old - and a struggling reader - so we are reading quite a few books together.
b. I got a new Bible for Christmas from the Mrs. It's the NIV Archaeological Study Bible - WOW!
c. My dad bought me "Wild at Heart" by John Eldridge. Amazing. I read his "Waking the Dead" first and continue to use the appendices as a prayer guide.
d. I have taken up "Krakatoa" again and enjoy the complexities of the Indonesian historical perspective as well as the geology.
Enjoy
bg
Hi Brad
Thanks for the recommendations. We just read Amazing Grace, the biography of Wilberforce, and I am now reading the autobiography of Olaudah Equiano, one of his contempories. The full title is, "The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or, Gustavus Vassa, the African." It's all fodder for a future blog.
If you like historical counts, mom recommends "Middlesex" which talks of Detroit in the days of Henry Ford. It won a Pulitzer.
LeeAnn G
Thanks LeeAnn. I'll look it up. I'm always in the market for good reading.
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