Review: River of Darkness by Buddy Levy 

El Dorado was first imagined to be just a King who bathed in gold, but soon came to signify the whole city of gold; the engraving shows a Guianan being anointed with gold dust, Theodor de Bry, 1599

11 thoughts on “Review: River of Darkness by Buddy Levy 

  1. If you like this you might like the Herzog movie “Aguirre, the Wrath of God,” but you made me think of Bernal Diaz’s book “The Conquest of New Spain,” a first person account written in 1568 of the Aztec conquest. I find contemporarily written treatments of historical matters (or those written very soon after the event) to capture the complexities and absurdities of history better than the sober treatments after. There’s also the famous William Prescott books from the 19th century you might like.

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    1. Yes, if you believe it, I was actually thinking about Aguirre, the Wrath of God all the time I was writing this review. I have just added The Conquest of New Spain to my TBR, many thanks. It looks like something I would really enjoy. I agree about the contemporary first person accounts being better. I previously loved book The Broken Spears: The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico, which compiles first-hand account writings from indigenous people (link also above in my first paragraph).

      I guess one can say that Levy also based his book on contemporary writings, that of missionary Gaspar de Carvajal, but it is impossible to differentiate Levy’s personal conjectures from that of the friar, unless he specifically quotes him, so I was never sure about the veracity, and of course, Carvajal himself presented the events that suited Orellana best. Thank you for another suggestion, I will also have a look at that Prescott book.

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  2. Orellana is quite a ‘myth’ though I dislike the term ‘mythic’ used too often these days.

    They were after the gold. Definitely. The Incas didn’t have time to hide it. In Colombia the locals did. Thousands of precious pieces have been found in the 20th century and are on display at the Gold Museum in Bogotá.

    I sidetracked myself. Like Aguirre you mentioned above, those “conquistadores” went for the gold and mostly found death and adventure. At one point, we’ll never know whether they realised that.

    Cheers.

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    1. Interesting, thanks! It must be quite an experience to visit this museum to learn more. There is a passage in the book where it says that, at one point, Orellana forbade his men from showing interest in gold which they saw on the natives so as not to spook them and make them believe they were indifferent to gold so that Orellana men could buy time and make the natives reveal even more gold – and it worked in certain situations, but I guess these are just instances, as rumours of conquistadors’ lust for gold were spreading far and wide.

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      1. The meeting of Europeans and Native Americans must have been quite a shock for both. Montaigne wrote about that in his essays. In the late 1500’s he went to a French Harbour I think might have been Nantes, where a ship had landed from the Americas bringing Native Americans. When he saw them, Montaigne wrote something like: “I fear we have eyes bigger than our bellies.” It’s a sort of French expression meaning: our ambitions are larger than our capacity.

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        1. Fascinating. It rings true that the European man has never been more (over?) confident in his abilities than during that period of peak renaissance. With culture, learning and science growing by leaps and bounds at home, there undoubtedly was that feeling of total power and invincibility wherever they land and whatever they encounter.

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  3. “It is exciting to read about a time when one had to physically set foot on a piece of land to discover what was actually there and what wonders it held.”… What lies in the depths of The Oceans is a mystery I love to ponder… I feel it’s easy to assume there is nothing except water and the sea creatures we’ve discovered. And that’s also why it’s the perfect hiding place!

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