Review
''With his keen eye and penchant for details, Taylor bestowed upon these tumultuous and anarchistic times an almost cinematic quality. Writing as he traveled, he managed to combine a sense of the poetic with straightforward historical documentation, underpinned with a wry sense of humor.... Widely regarded as a classic of western literature, Taylor's lively chronicle of the birth of modern California has lost nothing in terms of its initial freshness and vitality in the interim.''--
Rain Taxi Review of Books''Of all books written about the Gold Rush and the Forty-Niners, Eldorado is one of the most compelling narratives....A California version of the Federalist Papers.'' --The San Francisco Chronicle
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.
About the Author
Bayard Taylor was born in 1825 in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania. A restless student, Taylor was apprenticed to a printer at age seventeen. In 1844 his first volume of verse,
Ximena, was published. He then arranged with the
Saturday Evening Post and the
United States Gazetteer to finance a trip abroad in return for publication rights to his travel letters, which were compiled in the extremely popular
Views Afoot (1846). In 1847 he began a career in journalism in New York.
Eldorado was published in 1850. His
Poems of the Orient appeared in 1855. Taylor continued his trips to remote parts of the world--Âto the Orient, to Africa, to Russia--Âand became renowned as the Marco Polo of his day. In 1862 he became secretary of the U.S. legation at St. Petersburg, Russia. Of his works in this later period, the translation of
Faust (1870-ÃÂ71) remains his best known. Taylor died in Berlin, Germany, in 1878.
--This text refers to an alternate
Paperback
edition.