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Women's Fiction
The Rivers Ran East: Travelers' Tales Classics

The Rivers Ran East: Travelers' Tales Classics

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $11.53
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An amazing man and his story
Review: I was desperate for a another good travel memoir after traveling with Redmond O'Hanlon in South America and Eric Hansen in Borneo, so I ordered this after accidentally discovering it here. Well, I was not prepared for this journey. My jaw hit the floor on the first page and remained there throughout the whole incredible story. Clark's quirky personality and unbounded enthusiasm and belief in this trek to find the fabled Seven Cities of Cibola captured my imagination and had I been lucky enough to have been asked along on this trek, I would have followed without question. And all because of a treasure map someone sold him! The description of the silver and gold objects that had been reported was the most fabulous thing I had ever read or heard of. His ingenuity in getting over the difficult parts of the rivers on the trip out was amazing and his harrowing trek back to civilization kept me on the edge of my chair. And how clever of him to keep the best secret until last--they actually found gold. And Inez! No woman ever had a more interesting journey or life. I think young teens all the way up to seniors would be amazed to read about the part she played in this fabulous adventure. Before I really start gushing adjectives, I'll quit and just say read it. Mystery fans, history buffs, travel junkies, amateur biologists and anthropologists and adventure addicts--this book has something for everyone of you. I didn't realize he had written so many other books and I intend to get as many as possible and I suggest you do the same.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Found all books and articles written by the author
Review: I've nothing to add to the others reviews, because you've said all. I can only add that I've read this book for the first time when I was fourteen and today, that I'm 46 years old, I've read it again experiencing the same emotions!
Contact me to have the full list of books and articles written by leonard Clark

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great adventure story
Review: If you like adventure, you will like this book, especially if you are familiar with South America. It is helpful if you know Spanish and very helpful if you are familiar with the tribes and cultures of Peru and the like. Even though this book is somewhat of a narrative and not a novel, it is very entertaining. It will leave you asking, "is this really true?"

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The Rivers Ran East
Review: Leonard Clark was my uncle, and the new edition having been released, I have recently re-read The Rivers Ran East.

I found this book to be most incredible, not simply for the storytelling, but more importantly for Len's foresight into the value and preciousness of the South American rainforest. While he was admittedly not an environmentalist, he was truly a man ahead of his times in that respect. His appreciation for and finely detailed descriptions of the flora and fauna of the Amazon River basin are extremely topical and perhaps even more pertinent today than when he wrote the book. Among all else, he identifies specific native tribal practices and forest herbs as remedies unknown by Western medicine; as with many other products of the rainforest, these hold great promise and yet remain unresearched. Furthermore, his anthropological descriptions of the Amazonian natives capture a culture that now, just 50 years later, has largely been transformed to modern society and lost.

Purely on a swash-buckling adventure-tale level, the book is priceless: this is a real-life Indiana Jones! Len's hair-raising stunts, death-defying experiences, and encounters with Amazonian headhunters hit the reader one after another with nearly a breath in between.

Altogether five of Leonard's books were published: A Wanderer Till I Die (1937), The Rivers Ran East (1953), The Marching Wind (1954), Explorer's Digest (1955), and Yucatan Adventure (posthumously in 1958). All five make for fascinating reading. Many of his books were translated into Italian, Japanese, and other languages. My mother was Len's younger half-sister and I inherited her collection, which includes first editions in English of all five, as well as several of the translated versions, for example, the Japanese edition of The Marching Wind. In addition to The Rivers Ran East, The Marching Wind has also recently been republished and is now also available on Amazon.com. Beyond his books, articles by Len were published in National Geographic, Life, Literary Digest, Field and Stream, Popular Science, and American Weekly. The family still receives inquiries from time to time about possibly make a film based on one of his adventures, but none has been produced to date.

All of Len's books except for A Wanderer Till I Die were written after World War II. However, it was during the war that he perhaps made his greatest - though unpublished - contributions. Leonard served as an officer in the OSS, spending a good portion of the war in the China-Burma-India corridor conducting intelligence work in the Yellow River valley. Near the end of the war, he was stationed on Formosa and accepted the first (unofficial) surrender of the Japanese there. He earned the Legion of Merit, the Bronze Star, and the Order of the White Cloud with Ribbon, the highest honor given by the Chinese to the foreigners who served them.

All of Leonard's works are fact, not fiction, and he is very highly regarded in our family as a military hero and quintessential adventurer. After the war, he built a log cabin near Fresno, California that I visited as a child. I remember Len as a large, quiet, gentle man who liked to tease us children, smoke his pipe, and take long contemplative walks in the woods with my mother. Yet he also embodied a sophistication, powerfulness, and seriousness that I sensed even as a child.

Len was born on 1/6/1907. He died on 5/4/1957 under mysterious circumstances while exploring for gold and diamond mines on the Caroni River in Venezuela. You will find a fairly extensive biography in Current Biography, Volume 17, No. 1, January 1956, although this does not cover his last years. In addition, my father devoted 20 pages in our family history to Len. For more information, please feel free to contact me.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Tops on my list
Review: Several years ago I made the mistake of lending out my original copy to I-don't-remember-whom. Big mistake. This is my favorite book, ever, and I'm SO happy it's back in print! Other travellers will identify with the problem of what's it like to be a complete stranger, with little familiarity of the circumstances surrounding you, but Clark's travels might as well have been on another planet, for all he was able to deal with the problems thrown at him. Exciting reading, and lots to think about afterwards. I just want to know, is all that gold still there???? This time around I'm ordering two copies, just in case one goes astray again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Amazing!
Review: Simply one of the best and most exciting books I've ever read. This book definitely tops my favorites list. If adventure travel and/or reading is your thing, this book is for you. I was fortunate enough to find and read an original copy some years back and was surprised to see it reprinted and for sale here. I will definitely be getting a few copies as presents for people as the years go by. Enjoy!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: bigger n' badder than todays "expeditions".
Review: the story takes the author into the emerald hell to find the lost city of gold. despite the advances of technology, the sheer courage of mr.clark's story is not so far fetched after the findings in the andes and the yucatan. modern day adventures pale to the story told.power and glory to the finders of this the lost city of gold, makes modern explorers look like wimps...

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A most extraordinary story. Fascinating reading.
Review: The two earlier reviews say it all. REVIEWERS NOTE I would like very much to contact either of the reviewers for further information on the book and the author.


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