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Author: John Gimlette
Rarely visited by tourists and barely touched by global
village sprawl, Paraguay remains a mystery to outsiders.
Think of this small nation and your mind is likely to
jump to Nazis, dictators, and soccer. Now, Gimlette’s
book – equal parts travelog, history, and unorthodox
travel guide–breaches the boundaries of this isolated
land,” and illuminates a little-understood place
and its people.
It is a wonderfully animated telling of Paraguay's
story: of cannibals, Jesuits, and sixteenth-century
Anabaptists; of Victorian Australian socialists and
talented smugglers; of dictators and their mad mistresses;
bloody wars and Utopian settlements; and of lives transplanted
from Japan, Britain, Poland, Russia, Germany, Ireland,
Korea, and the United States. The author travels from
the insular cities and towns of the east, along ghostly
trails through the countryside, to reach the Gran Chaco
of the west: the “green hell” covering almost
two-thirds of the country, where 4 percent of the population
coexists–more or very-much-less peacefully–with
a vast array of exotic wildlife that includes jaguars,
prehistoric lungfish, and their more recently evolved
distant cousins, the great fighting river fish. Gimlette
visits with Mennonites and the indigenas, arms dealers
and real-estate tycoons, shopkeepers, government bureaucrats
and, of course, Nazis.
Filled with bizarre incident, fascinating anecdote,
and richly evocative detail, this is a fascinating description
of a country of eccentricity and contradiction, of beguilingly
individualistic men and women, and of unexpected and
extraordinary beauty. It is a vivid, often riotous,
journey.
From Publishers Weekly
Over the past 500 years, Paraguay has been invaded by successive waves
of conquistadors, missionaries, Mennonites, Australian socialists, fugitive
Nazis and, perhaps most improbably, Islamic extremists. "An island
surrounded by land," bordered by vast deserts and impenetrable jungles,
Paraguay is a country uniquely suited for those seeking to drop out of
sight or, like Gimlette, find themselves. The author was 18 when he first
traveled to Paraguay more than two decades ago; return visits only deepened
his appreciation for the nation and its tragicomic past. Gimlette seems
to have gone everywhere and talked to everyone. He boats down piranha-infested
rivers, hobnobs with Anglo-Paraguayan socialites and hunts down the former
hiding place of notorious Auschwitz doctor Josef Mengele. Gimlette, a
travel writer and lawyer in London, proves a chatty, amiable guide to
local institutions like the national railway (which has no running trains)
and native wildlife, like the fierce, raccoon-like coatimundis (who, Gimlette
writes, "make up for their absence of pity with fistfuls of dagger-like
claws"). Yet he doesn't shirk from the nastier aspects of Paraguay's
bloody history. Gimlette describes in horrific detail, for example, the
rape and conquest of the Guarani Indians as well as the brutally repressive
regime of Don Alfredo Stroessner (whose U.S.-backed dictatorship lasted
longer than any other in the Western Hemisphere). Gimlette could have
used some judicious editing-the narrative drags in parts, and its scattered
chronology can be confusing-but he never fails to impress with his ingenuity,
sincerity and sense of humor. 16 pages of color and b&w photos, not
seen by PW.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier
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$25.00 (hardcover)
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