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September 18, 2008
"Incidents of Travel in Yucatan" by John L. Stephens
Book Description (Amazon.com Review):
As director of the Ocean Steam Navigating Company and president of the Panama Railway
Company, Stephens (1805-1852) knew a lot about travel, and he wrote about it. His first
book, Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan, went through 12
printings and earned its author $15,000 in its first three months, making him one of
America's first bestselling writers. Edgar Allen Poe called it "perhaps the most
interesting book of travel ever published." This more seasoned and focused account of
Stephens's second trip, originally published in 1843, is packed with detailed accounts
of travels in newly discovered Mayan ruins and with equally fascinating lithographs by
his travel companion, Frederick Catherwood. Through Stephens's eyes, readers see Yucatan
villages of 150 years ago, when Indians used cacao beans instead of money in their
marketplaces; a Catholic/indigenous hybrid funeral that seems no more barbaric than the
crude medical treatments rendered by another of Stephens's travel companions, Dr. Cabot,
on their Mayan guides. One of the first to acknowledge that indigenous Americans might
have built the great American pyramids and temples, not Egyptians, Greeks or one of the
lost tribes of Israel, Stephens voiced a rare, nonjudgmental viewpoint in a time when
European cultural elitism was the unquestioned norm. Not just a curiosity for archeology
buffs or cultural studies types, this is also an informative, intriguing guide for armchair
travelers.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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