4+ stars - This is the third book I’ve read by David Grann. I enjoy his journalistic and research-oriented writing style. He knows how to weave a yarn and draw the reader in; I was captivated by this story of one man’s obsession with finding the lost city of Z. Colonel Percy Harrison Fawcett is an intrepid explorer who mapped areas of South America previously unknown to Europeans. Only Indian tribes lived there, some very hostile and with good reason. Many had been enslaved by the Spanish conquistadores; many others had been murdered. According to Grann’s research, Fawcett was impressive physically and seemed to never tire. During his South American ventures, Fawcett heard tales of El Dorado, an ancient civilization in the Amazon, where “The Great Lord...goes about continually covered in gold dust, as fine as ground salt.” According to legend, there were also groves of cinnamon trees in the kingdom, a spice that was highly valued at the time. The Incan empire had at one time consisted of nearly two million square kilometers and was peopled by more than ten million. Discoveries like this fueled Fawcett’s obsession of finding El Dorado, which he called Z.
Grann delves into Fawcett’s past, his marriage to Nina, a very cultured daughter of a magistrate in Ceylon, his exploits in South America, his service as a Lt. Colonel during World War I, and his dealing with spiritualists, including the controversial Madame Blavatsky. What I enjoyed most about Grann’s account is that he reveals his protagonist’s flaws along with his idolized characteristics. Some of the bad include his surly nature after spending time with his family, his preference for his son Jack over his other two children, and his tendency to intimidate men he considered physically inferior or not up to his standards. On these long treks into the Amazon, even the slightest injury could prove fatal. Fawcett would prefer to abandon men rather than lose time taking them to a neighboring village to be cared for. Fawcett’s almost infallible constitution, his courage, the dignity and respect he almost always shows the Indian tribes are just a few of his most highly idolized attributes.
In April 1925, Fawcett entered the Amazon accompanied by his twenty-one-year-old son, Jack, and Jack’s best friend, Raleigh Rimell. Jack, as fit and muscular as Fawcett, seemed to his father the ideal explorer’s companion. Raleigh, whose father had been a surgeon in the Royal Navy, was also a muscular young man, known to have a joyful and clownish nature. As their journey is well underway, Raleigh suffers from an infected foot and becomes despondent and gloomy. Fawcett begins to worry that Raleigh will keep him from his goals. He takes him aside, encouraging him to return with the guides. I want to whisper in Raleigh’s ear, “Go!,” to shout in his dreams, “Leave!” Raleigh has written to his brother, “Two’s company--Three’s none.” Jack is like his father, turned on and energetic with the adventure. Raleigh has no desire for glory or fame and longs for “a small business and to settle down with a family.”
While writing this book, Grann pursues his own journey into the heart of the Amazon. I would have been disappointed had he not mentioned the Amazon’s current state, it’s decimation, the difference between Fawcett’s time and now. Grann writes,
“I kept looking out the window, expecting to see the first signs of a fearsome jungle. Instead, the terrain looked like Nebraska--perpetual plains that faded into the horizon. When I asked Taukane where the forest was, he said, simply, “Gone.” A moment later, he pointed to a fleet of diesel-belching trucks heading in the opposite direction, carrying sixty-foot logs.”
What destiny does Fawcett meet in the jungle? I was impressed by Grann’s research and his attention to detail. As well, he is thorough. I felt like I was getting a full picture of Fawcett, the man, and explorer, as well as insight into early twentieth-century events. The ending felt a little contrived but suits Grann’s particular storytelling method. Above journalistic and research-oriented, Grann is above all, a grand storyteller.