Short, so perfect for an audiobook. What a great story, though, and what a great adventure. Although I'm starting to think that "adventure" is synonymous with being miserable, and the amount of adventure corresponds with the length of time being miserable.
Still can't get over the hurricane of 1502, and how Columbus begged the governor of Hispaniola to keep the fleet that was set to sail back to Spain in port for a week longer. In what must be the biggest example of karma ever, Columbus was proven all too correct, and around 30 ships and 800 souls went to the bottom. All except the ship carrying Columbus' property, which was picked by the vindictive governor because it was the worst ship in the fleet. And being the slowest, was spared the worst of the storm, and thus was the only ship to actually make it back to Spain. His prediction was so accurate, and his opponents proven so horribly wrong for disbelieving him, that he was accused of black magic! How else to explain the results???!!!
But I expect Columbus was saddened by the results. And he may not have learned of what happened until the end of his own star-crossed fourth voyage, so any exultation would have long before been worn away, I expect.
One thing the book reminded me of was the fact that wooden ships are always in the process of sinking. Without constant attention and maintenance, they will go to the bottom in a matter of months, if not weeks. And so Columbus ultimately lost all four ships, mostly because he anchored in a safe harbor in Central America, only to discover that during the dry season, the river that emptied into the bay didn't provide enough water for the ships to get over the sand bar back into the Caribbean! And during the wet season, a heavy storm in the mountains resulted in a sudden and violent flood that nearly sank the fleet.
That harbor is where most of the action occurs. The natives are initially friendly to the Spaniards. The local chief recognized a potential ally in his battles with other tribes (politics is a constant in human existence). But ultimately, Columbus wore out his welcome, and then the battles began.
The Spaniards had been shown an area with gold on the ground among the tree roots. (The Indians often traded gold for glass beads and other trinkets; both sides certain they had cheated the other). So Columbus tried to leave a fort there. Unfortunately, the Indians attacked as soon as Columbus' fleet left the harbor. Fortunately, a boat came back for water, so the men could be saved. Unfortunately, the boat crew pulled up the river despite the attack, and all got hacked to pieces, with only one survivor, who escaped by swimming under water.
The adventures don't end there! Columbus steers his two remaining ships aground in Jamaica. They are too unseaworthy to make it just a few more miles to Hispaniola. Miraculously, two of his men, with Indian help, managed to use canoes to make it across the narrow straight (the current was against them, making the passage difficult). I was surprised that such a short passage was so difficult for the Indians, with several of them dying due to lack of water. I would have thought the Indians, living in the Caribbean, would have been great seafarers. After all, how else did their ancestors arrive on Jamaica? But apparently, those skills were not passed down!
Anyway, there were many more adventures, too many to list. Mutinies, fights with Indians, politics with the governor of Hispaniola, who feared Columbus' fame, etc. Columbus' brother Bartholeme was a true hero, along with several other crew members.
So read the book! The fourth voyage was a true adventure.