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17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Good secondary-level textbook.,
By A Customer
This review is from: First Voyage to America: From the Log of the "Santa Maria" (Dover Children's Classics) (Paperback)
This reprint of the 1938 illustrated edition of Columbus' journal covers the crossing of the Atlantic from August 3 to October 14, 1492. The (uncredited) translation is from Las Casas' abridgement of the journal in the HISTORIAS DE LAS INDIAS. The note at the beginning of the Dover edition explains the origin of the text. This book would be suitable for instruction with advanced middle school and high school students. It is unfortunate that the text is truncated upon arrival in Hispaniola since it omits many of the interesting passages concerning early contact with the islanders and Columbus' return voyage to Spain
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The likeable dreamer,
This review is from: First Voyage to America: From the Log of the "Santa Maria" (Dover Children's Classics) (Paperback)
Author: Christopher Columbus
Title: Logbook Time: 1492-93 Destination: (India) the Caribbean Length: about 8 months Type: by ship Rating: 9/10 The likeable dreamer Please note: This is not CC's original logbook. It is merely an edited transcript of the original log (which got lost), handed down by Bartolomé de Las Casas in the early 16th century. Some editions preserve de Las Casas' style of writing, while others attempt to restore the original first-person perspective of CC's account. This might very well be one of the most interesting books I have ever read. The story: In August 1492, CC sets sail in Spain, aiming at the Canary Islands and far West from there. He has three ships and a great dream to his name: to engrave his name in history by becoming the discoverer of a Western passage to India! On October 12th he lands on a strange shore, which he identifies as a set of islands off the Asian coast. He meets with the people living there, communicates with them and eventually sails back to Spain, leaving an outpost behind and taking a small group of "natives" with him. I guess there are a lot of reasons to not like CC: first and foremost, his legacy did bring millionfold pain and destruction to the indigenous peoples of the Americas. Besides that, he seems to have been constantly on the hunt for valuable minerals wherever he landed, and even in his later years he could never be convinced that the landmass he had discovered was in fact not Asia, but a whole new continent later known as North and South America. All of the above might be true, but this book is a surprisingly good read nonetheless: the 320 pages I have been reading never felt old or boring at all. CC has a great eye for details to add life to the text, and his diary entries are nicely diverse, ranging from short, laconic two-liners to long paragraphs spilling over with exuberance and excitement. He loves the scenery: "I saw a number of huts and a wide valley dotted with settlements and traversed by a river. Never have I seen anything more beautiful." And he shows a sort of sympathy for the population: "Nothing is more easily recognizable than someone making a gift that comes from the heart." It is possible that these weren't CC's true feelings - he could have written those words as a sort of advertisement for the king of Spain, or they might even have been the result of a textual modification by de Las Casas. Whatever the case, the picture of CC that I got from the text was that of a passionate dreamer, and a very likeable one too: joy in triumph, fear in the face of danger, obsession and self-doubt - it is all here, within these chronicles from the dawn of the Age of Discovery. Obviously, CC is a child of his time, too: he finds it necessary to missionarize, wants to find huge amounts of gold for his king, and is always looking for new territories to add to the Spanish dominion. But he is certainly not a conquistador. Here are his first words about the first people he meets on the first island he lands on: "In recognition of the fact that they were people who could better be converted to our Holy Faith by love than by the sword, I was looking to make friends with them..." If only the Colonial powers had lived up to these words. Great man, great book. 9 out of 10, no doubt.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Very good illustrations -- older grades,
By
This review is from: First Voyage to America: From the Log of the "Santa Maria" (Dover Children's Classics) (Paperback)
Very good illustrations -- this book includes excerpts from the ship's log of the Santa Maria. It's a good book for showing the courage of the expedition, and also for pointing out how Columbus misled his crew to keep them from despairing. Older grades.
1 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enthusiastically recommended reading,
By Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: First Voyage to America: From the Log of the "Santa Maria" (Dover Children's Classics) (Paperback)
Compiled by the editorial staff of RMJ Publications, "First Voyage" showcases the short story telling talents in an impressive anthology of thirteen original fantasy tales by first time authors -- as well as a few who are established authors trying their hand for the first time in a new genre. Some of the stories have a science fiction orientation, others a fantasy or horror content. But all of them are unique, original, entertaining works that showcase storytelling talents of the first order. Comprising "First Voyage" are Leslie Hoffman's 'The Walk-Ins'; Betty Lee's 'My Dog Story'; Douglas A. Davy's 'The Oracle'; Stacee Hallquist's 'The Bridge'; Roger Storkamp's 'Child of a Mail-Order Bride'; Elaine Stubbs' 'The Wendigo'; Laura Alton's 'Test Animal?'; James Fick's 'Yes or No, Even I Can't Decide'; Fred Rayworth's 'Fun in the Outland'; Charle E. Fuller Jr.'s 'Argentiferous Projectiles'; Maxwell A. Drake's 'Last Man on Earth'; and the collaborative piece 'The Eclipse' by Richard Wine, Elaine Stubbs and Lynn Lanier. Of special note is the author biography section. "First Voyage" is enthusiastically recommended reading and a welcome addition to any personal or community library Fantasy & Science Fiction collection.
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First Voyage to America: From the Log of the "Santa Maria" (Dover Children's Classics) by Christopher Columbus (Paperback - August 13, 1991)
$9.95
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