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Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made
 
 
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Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made [Hardcover]

Adrian Colesberry (Author), Brass McLean (Author), Kimberly Parsons (Photographer)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 1993
A collection of stirring essays from writers Adrian Colesberry and Brass McLean (both veteran travelers), "Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made," tells the history of the country from the inside out, starting with its geological formation and ending with its status as the "Switzerland of Central America."

"The Last Country," highlighted by the stunning photos of international photographer Kimberly Parsons, showcases the strength of their collaborative and individual talents. Parson’s photos of sugar-processing plants, spider monkeys, oxen at work, cemetery angels, fishermen, school children, street musicians and volcanoes form a vivid rendering of life in Costa Rica. Colesberry and McLean match the more than 65 photos with passionate words, adding a human element to subjects ranging from coffee to indigenous peoples, from ants to women’s issues, from bananas to religion; their spirit is infectious. The essays are accompanied by sidebars, short, insightful thoughts on little-known facts about the country.

Winner of the 1994 Publishers Marketing Association's "Ben Franklin Award" for "Best Travel Narrative" written in the United States.



Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Illustrated with 62 photographs, this workmanlike overview covers Costa Rican geography, history, geology, politics and mores. Colesberry, a journalist, and technical writer McLean, both of whom are based in Los Angeles, have produced an uninspired text that, despite the book's lyrical subtitle, is unlikely to send readers to the nearest travel agency. Parsons, a San Francisco-based travel photographer, captures the country in shots characteristic of Caribbean travel brochures.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"Explores diversity of the people, natural beauty and ecology, portraying its history and politics in compelling prose and vibrant photography." -- 2004 Overseas Adventure Travel—Twice Awarded Travel & Leisure Magazine’s Top 10 Tour & Safari Operators in the “World’s Best Awards.” oattravel.com

Not the usual picturebook fluff, liberally accented with notes on history and archeology. The result is more illumination than whitewash. -- Coleman Andrews, The Los Angeles Times, April 10, 1994

This spectacular book introduces readers to the authors' love affair with Costa Rica. -- Book Passage, April 28, 1994

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 152 pages
  • Publisher: Globe Pequot Press; First Edition edition (October 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1560442514
  • ISBN-13: 978-1560442516
  • Product Dimensions: 11.4 x 8.7 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.8 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,354,066 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Adrian Colesberry was born at 7:20 in the morning after a delivery that caused his mother, by the kindly woman's own report, no pain. Since that day, he has taken scrupulous care to endow the rest of his life with the same modesty and kindness that characterized his miraculous entrance into this world.

He got a degree in biomedical engineering (painful, true, but only for him). After college, he spent ten years managing manufacturing operations in the pharmaceutical industry where, he is proud to report, he never made any product that could be used to pour gasoline on the raging fire of male insecurity about whether their penises are long enough or thick enough or hard enough or hard enough for long enough or hard enough fast enough or hard enough at the right time enough...

Adrian remembers a golden age when the cure for perceived erectile deficiencies was something called cunnilingus and he believes that those were happier times for men and (especially) for women. Ladies?

In the evenings, after work, Adrian did stand-up comedy, proving once more the age-old formula:

corporate drug manufacturing + time (approx 2 hours) = comedy.

In 2002, he landed a spot on NBC's Late Friday.

After his divorce, Adrian quit his corporate job and found humbler employment as a background extra in film and TV. He didn't get to deploy his college education as an extra, but he did gain a brand new skill set including: dressing himself, arriving at a specific location at a specific time, filling out an employment voucher, shutting up when anyone said, "Rolling!" sitting, standing and walking in lines, both straight and curved.

Adrian highly recommends extra work for reducing your karmic load. The most ambitious monk would be challenged to do less in one day than an extra. It was during his Zen-like retreat into extra-land, that Adrian wrote the dirty, funny, dirty How to Make Love to Adrian Colesberry.

Much of the book was written on a Palm Pilot standing around between takes on such fine films as Aviator and Spiderman 2, and on celebrated TV shows like Boston Legal, ER, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and Entourage in which his back and torso and face have appeared for countable fractions of a second.

An excerpt from an early version of his book was published on Nerve.com. Not his first time out of the gates as a writer, in 1994, he wrote the award-winning Costa Rica: the Last Country the Gods Made.

 

Customer Reviews

14 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (14 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

35 of 36 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars It covers everything about the country and has gorgeous pics, December 9, 1997
This review is from: Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made (Hardcover)
I bought this book last year after I came back from a trip to Costa Rica. I wish I had known about it beforehand! The writers are very passionate about everything Costa Rican from coffee to indigenous peoples, from ants to women's issues, from bananas to religion! My favorite chapter was "House Made of Rain", an exploration of the rain forest from the point of view of a bird--you'll never forget it! By the way, the book is a beautiful hardcover, not paperback.
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23 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars strange but exciting, February 19, 2004
This review is from: Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made (Hardcover)
When you see the cover, you know you're in for a MOST unusual book about a country about which 100 guide books have already been written. One sees an angel statue in a graveyard at dawn, or is it twilight? Is this Costa Rica or "have goth, will travel"? Well, maybe a little of both. The eccentricities of the two writers are on the front burner here with subjects like bats, nitrogen-fixing organisms, Arab-oil embargoes, human diseases, hydroelectricity, the Pan-American highway, trash-burning and communism. But maybe that's what makes these series of essays a good read, especially while one is traveling, because the 1-10 page segments stand on their own.

And the photos are equally "unique," shall we say-not what one would normally expect from a travel book. Once you get past the beautiful inappropriateness of the cover picture, the reader is further challenged by artsy, gorgeous photos that seem to stand alone from the text. Fruit still-lifes, rodeo-cowboys, father and son mechanics on a lunch break, cattle herders, city street musicians, a sunlit pathway through a rainforest; all these random images "float" through the text without a care for relevance!

However, having said that, somehow it works. The book as a whole, pictures plus words, truly gives one a "feeling" for Costa Rican life as it is really lived. That's the best way I can describe this strange but exciting book. It makes you feel because it makes you understand. I can't recommend it highly enough.

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17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A spiritual geography......, October 29, 2004
This review is from: Costa Rica: The Last Country The Gods Made (Hardcover)
This book evokes the country of Costa Rica and it's influence on its peoples by describing the harsh, desolate, yet sublime landscape that embodies the contradictions of Costa Rican life within it's borders and in it's geo-political stature in Central America.

As dry-wiited as it is information soaked, this book gives the traveler a place to begin in the land that never seems to be what the traveler expects. "The Last Country the Gods Made" is a contemplative book, a book of essays that creates a spiritual geography, explains the eccentricity of archeology and throws light on the urgency of visionary politics.

This masterful synthesis is a refreshingly unconventional analysis informed by anthopology, migratory science, architecture, environmentalism, epistemology and political minutiae. There is wonderful mini-essay that the authors' call a "sidebar" entitled, "Why No Empire." In it, Colesberry and McLean address the mystery of why the native people of Costa Rica, though amazingly organized, greatly populated and artistically skilled, never formed any urban centers like the Aztec and Mayan empires. Suffice to say, that they pose an utterly unique solution involving Egypt, mideval French wheat farmers, and Vasquez de Coronado's observations of buzzards!

They end this delightful foray with, "...perhaps the local Amerindians had no use for urban zones or concentrations of power that would have placed them in the ranks of advanced societies. If urbanity is the litmus test for civilizations, consider this: in the Diquis area, the leaders lived with not the warriors as one might imagine, but with the artists. How urbane can you get?"

I'd like to say one more thing. The Search Inside the Book pages that Amazon shows you in no way represent the book's text! The pages you can read are just the introduction written by the publisher! It's ridiculous that Amazon doesn't present the meat of this lovely text, since the writing is particularly accomplished.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The Costa Rican national seal gives a revealing, stylized view of the country. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
coffee barons, last country, coffee industry
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Costa Rica, Don Pepe, Central American, Meseta Central, Atlantic Watershed, North American, New World, President Guardia, South America, San Isidro, The Last Country the Gods Made, Minor Keith, National Opposition, Gulf of Nicoya, United Brands, United Fruit, General Valley, Manuel Mora, National Theater, Ochomogo Height, Pan American Highway, Pedro Arias, World War, Coto Colorado, Latin America
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