The River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt's Darkest Journey
by Candice Millard
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Read in January, 2007
The River of Doubt revisits (then) former President Theodore Roosevelt’s journey down the uncharted Amazon tributary known as the River of Doubt. After losing a tough race for his third chance at President, Teddy, at the age of 54 and weighing 220 lbs, sets off to explore one of the most daunting natural wonders with little experience and more baggage than the Queen.
With that set-up, Candice Millard takes us through the grueling journey as it was documented by the former President, his so...more
With that set-up, Candice Millard takes us through the grueling journey as it was documented by the former President, his so...more
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Read in July, 2008
This book was fantastic. I would have given it a 5, but I think I should reserve 5's for the truly remarkable. Before I began to read this book, I figured it would be about Teddy Roosevelt. I am quite a presidential junkie, so if it did turn out to be about TR, I would surely have been happy. But, instead, the real star of the book was the Amazon River. And that turned out to be quite a welcomed surprise.
By way of background, after TR lost the 1912 election to Woodrow Wilson he decided to e...more
By way of background, after TR lost the 1912 election to Woodrow Wilson he decided to e...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone looking for an excuse not to take an Amazon trip
This book presents an interesting chapter in TR's life, when, after defeat in the 1912 election, he decided to tackle an unmapped tributary of the Amazon.
Positives:
- Genuinely interesting historical event, even for someone who is not a fan of TR or exploration history
- The author excels when she talks about actual events, i.e. follows the narrative
- Well written, not strenuous to read
Negatives:
- The author has issues when she digresses into general topics (e.g. life in the Amazon...more
Positives:
- Genuinely interesting historical event, even for someone who is not a fan of TR or exploration history
- The author excels when she talks about actual events, i.e. follows the narrative
- Well written, not strenuous to read
Negatives:
- The author has issues when she digresses into general topics (e.g. life in the Amazon...more
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bookshelves:
non-fiction
Read in April, 2008
GASP - Non-fiction!!! And I didn't hate it!
A notorious loather of non-fiction, I might just have found the one to break the cycle. River of Doubt was a brilliant, well-crafted narrative of Theodore Roosevelt's arduous journey down a previously unmapped tributary of the Amazon River. Barely surviving, Roosevelt makes it to the end in weary triumph.
One of my big problems with non-fiction is that there is no suspense. (Ok, one might argue that about romance novels, too, but go...more
A notorious loather of non-fiction, I might just have found the one to break the cycle. River of Doubt was a brilliant, well-crafted narrative of Theodore Roosevelt's arduous journey down a previously unmapped tributary of the Amazon River. Barely surviving, Roosevelt makes it to the end in weary triumph.
One of my big problems with non-fiction is that there is no suspense. (Ok, one might argue that about romance novels, too, but go...more
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Read in July, 2008
This is an account of Theodore Roosevelt's descent down a previously unchartered tributary to the Amazon. What is amazing is that anyone, much less a former president, would make such a journey as poorly prepared as Roosevelt's expedition. For instance, to lighten the load on the overland journey to reach the headwater, they left behind a number of light weight canoes and arrived at the river with no boats whatsoever. Poorly crafted dugouts purchased from natives were unable to carry all of t...more
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bookshelves:
history
Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone who likes TR and exploration
Teddy Roosevelt is a MAN. I was a big TR fan before and an even bigger one now which is a nice surprise considering that I wasn't expecting much from this book.
There is one scene that I think sums up how impressive TR was. It comes when they are slightly more than half way through their journey, although the exploration party has no way of knowing that. TR has an infected leg, a fever, and has already stated that he should be left behind for certain death because he is a burden on the oth...more
There is one scene that I think sums up how impressive TR was. It comes when they are slightly more than half way through their journey, although the exploration party has no way of knowing that. TR has an infected leg, a fever, and has already stated that he should be left behind for certain death because he is a burden on the oth...more
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Read in June, 2008
Teddy Roosevelt was fifty-five years old when he journeyed through Brazil to explore the River of Doubt, a heretofore unchartered thousand mile body of water. The journey changed the map of South America, but it also proved to be the greatest test of Roosevelt's adventurous life, and would eventually shorten the span of his years. In clear, unsentimental prose, Candice Millard uses the story of the expedition to paint the portrait of an extraordinary man. Roosevelt was a force of nature, as f...more
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Read in September, 2007
The account of Teddy Roosevelt's wild Amazon journey. After losing his bid for a 3rd term, a depressed Roosevelt heads for Brazil on a mission for the Natrual History Museum in NY. What started as a benign tour turned into a harrowing expedition to chart an unknown tributary - The River of Doubt. It was a journey that drove Roosevelt to the brink of suicide. The story is a page-turner - - an adventure or a calamity awaits the team around every corner. Just as gripping are the personalities ...more
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Read in May, 2007
I'm currently reading this book, and it's meeting the need I'd hoped it would meet: I wanted to read about what a complete animal Teddy Roosevelt was. Indeed, he was a serious animal. I can't believe how unprepared these guys were as they barged into this totally unforgiving terrain. I'm only 100 pages in, but this book has made me think about how soft we've become as a people.
**It's now late September, and while I finished this back in May, I never updated this review. This book was a great ...more
**It's now late September, and while I finished this back in May, I never updated this review. This book was a great ...more
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bookshelves:
american-histry,
audiobooks,
biogr-memoir,
exploration
Read in December, 2005
I'm fascinated by the life and times of Teddy Roosevelt. When Roosevelt lost the election of 1912, he took off for South America on an adventure that nearly killed him. The expedition met numerous setbacks -- problems with disease, loss of canoes and essential supplies, passages through boiling rapids and through the territory of hostile natives. Throughout it all, Roosevelt seemed almost undaunted and was ever the avid naturalist and hunter, up until he contracted a deadly bacterial infectio...more
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Read in February, 2008
This is an exceptionally documented story of Theodore Roosevelt’s 1913-1914 journey down an unmapped river in the Brazilian Amazon. The expedition’s descent of the River of Doubt is such a fantastic tale wrapped in grandeur that it at times reads unbelievable. Candice Millard is able to lend credibility to the adventure through her diligent research and the supporting quotes pulled directly form the personal journals, published articles, and interviews of the expedition members and descendan...more
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
A person with rivers of doubt about how good this book is.
Theodore Roosevelt has a river named after him in Brazil. At least on the maps supplied in this book (if I were Brazilian I would have been tempted to change the name). Also: leeches. You'll learn this and more by reading The River of Doubt! Candice Millard used to write for National Geographic, and she keeps the chapters short, so even if you don't generally like adventure writing or non-fiction the plot or whatever moves along very quickly. If you'd like, you can consider this a histori...more
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This was very informative! TR was a charasmatic individual and a self-promoter (which tends to go hand-in-hand with that type of personality). After stepping down from the office of President which he apparently could have easily won for another 4 years, he was unhappy not being in the public eye. When his run for office in 1912 ended in failure, he undertook the journey to the Amazon to take part in mapping one of its tributaries. I never knew this fact and I am sure that most Americans today p...more
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Read in January, 2008
Theodore Roosevelt is my personal historical hero. He acomplished more in his "strenuous life" than most people even dream about. He was a Progressive liberal who championed personal responsibility, an ardent militant who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for stopping an ongoing war. He read and wrote constantly.
At a time when most men would have sought out retirement, he took on one last, great adventure - travelling and mapping out the "River of Doubt", a tributary of t...more
At a time when most men would have sought out retirement, he took on one last, great adventure - travelling and mapping out the "River of Doubt", a tributary of t...more
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Read in March, 2008
After his failed bid to regain the presidency, Theodore Roosevelt set off on a quest to explore the River of Doubt, a previously unexplored 1000 mile long river that runs through several South American countries. The book tells the tale of how Roosevelt, along with his son Kermit and an expeditionary force travel through the rain forest that emcompasses the river. The book describes, in great detail, the hazards associated with their journey. The rain forest is an unforgiving environment. Th...more
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Read in February, 2008
I can't imagine any ex-president taking a trip like this. There are some I WISH would take a trip like this, but the bottom line is that Teddy Roosevelt was fearless and I'm glad he was because it makes for a great book.
While much of the peril on Roosevelt's river adventure was due to poor planning, I still wonder how anybody can plan well for a trip down a river that nobody's explored before. It didn't help that Murphy's Law was pretty much in effect during the whole trip.
I though...more
While much of the peril on Roosevelt's river adventure was due to poor planning, I still wonder how anybody can plan well for a trip down a river that nobody's explored before. It didn't help that Murphy's Law was pretty much in effect during the whole trip.
I though...more
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I got this book for two reasons: 1. I've been reading too many chic-books 2. I need to prepare for my retirement south of the border with some social history about the Amazon. Absorbing book detailing not only Roosevelt's trip down the Amazon, but also describing some political history, Roosevelt's family life and how he raised his children, explainations about geological history of South America, the biology of the jungle, development of animal and plant life in the Amazon, and a lot of detail...more
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Read in January, 2007
I saw this book in a patient's room, and finally got around to buying and reading it. I shouldn't have waited so long! In an attempt to stave off depression following a failed Presidential bid, Teddy Roosevelt decides to once again physically challenge himself by exploring an unmapped tributary of the Amazon. (Well, others actually do the exploring; Roosevelt was more interested in just the challenge itself.) Although you know how the story will end, the fascination is not in the outcome but...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommends it for:
History nerds, adventure travelers
I challenge anyone to find a more interesting character from American history than Theodore Roosevelt. After serving as president, he tried founding a new political party and running for the White House again, and when that effort failed, he decided to drown his sorrows by hitting the lecture circuit in South America, then embarking on an expedition down an unmapped river. It was a complete disaster, and Roosevelt barely escaped with his life.
This book captures the grueling conditions and co...more
This book captures the grueling conditions and co...more
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Read in November, 2007
I've been devouring real exploration tales recently, and this one is like candy. It's both enjoyable, and slightly mediocre like that artificial candy you get at restaurants when you pay your bill. The author has mastered a certain approach to adventure writing - suspense, chapters that end with cliffhangers, an uncomplicated writing style - but the pacing of the book is a bit off. I love the digressions about tribes in the Amazon, jungle flora and fauna, and countless other National Geograph...more
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