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Horwitz decides to find out, and in A VOYAGE LONG AND STRANGE he uncovers the neglected story of America’s founding by Europeans. He begins a thousand years ago, with the Vikings, and then tells the dramatic tale of conquistadors, castaways, French voyageurs, and many others who roamed and rampaged across half the states of the present-day U.S. continent, long before the Mayflower landed.
To explore this history and its legacy in the present, Horwitz embarks on an epic quest of his own—trekking in search of grape-rich Vinland, Ponce de León’s Fountain of Youth, Coronado’s Cities of Gold, Walter Raleigh’s Lost Colonists, and other mysteries of early America. And everywhere he goes, Horwitz probes the revealing gap between fact and legend, between what we enshrine and what we forget.
An irresistible blend of history, myth, and misadventure, A VOYAGE LONG AND STRANGE allows us to rediscover the New World for ourselves.
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Creators
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Publisher
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Awards
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Release date
April 29, 2008 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781415943977
- File size: 497742 KB
- Duration: 17:16:57
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
Bestselling reporter and adventurer Tony Horwitz loves to pull back the curtain on neglected stories. In CONFEDERATES IN THE ATTIC he wrote about men and women who like to dress up in uniforms and reenact the Civil War. Horwitz stumbled upon his latest quest with a chance visit to Plymouth Rock. The underwhelming exhibit there got Horwitz thinking about the time between Columbus's visit to the New World and the Pilgrims' settlement led by John Smith. Narrator John Mayer navigates the 120-year span between the two iconic men, allowing his pacing to quicken as history lessons dovetail with Horwitz's visits to outlandish roadside attractions populated by backwoods characters. Listeners learn a good deal about Columbus and Smith, but even more about America in the 21st century. R.O. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine -
AudioFile Magazine
What happened in America between Columbus's voyages in 1492 and the arrival of the Pilgrims in 1620? Tony Horwitz took a journey around the continent to find out, tracking down Norse and Huguenot settlements (among others) and the stories behind them. Horwitz's voice doesn't have the polish of a professional narrator and can even sound monotonous, but he uses that to advantage, emphasizing his dry humor with his understated delivery. Horwitz's travels not only bring out the facts behind historical stories, but they also provide a portrait of the people he meets along the way. The deft combination of travelogue and historical essay is entertaining as well as informative. J.A.S. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
March 10, 2008
Signature
Reviewed by
Robert Sullivan
As opposed to the Pilgrims, Tony Horwitz begins his journey at Plymouth Rock.
Plymouth Rock is a myth. The Pilgrims—who, Horwitz notes, were on a mission that was based less on freedom and the schoolbook history ideas the president of the United States typically mentions when he pardons a turkey at the White House and more on finding a cure for syphilis—may or may not have noticed it. In about 1741, a church elder in Plymouth, winging it, pointed out a boulder that is now more like a not-at-all-precious stone. Three hundred years later, people push and shove to see it in summer tourist season, wearing T-shirts that say, “America’s Hometown.” Which eventually leads an overstimulated (historically speaking) Horwitz to come close to starting a fight in a Plymouth bar. “Not to Virginians it isn’t,” he writes. “Or Hispanics or Indians.”
“Forget all the others,” his bar mate says loudly. “This
is the friggin’ beginning of America!”
A Voyage Long and Strange
is a history-fueled, self-imposed mission of rediscovery, a travelogue that sets out to explore the surprisingly long list of explorers who discovered America, and what discovered
means anyway, starting with the Vikings in A.D. 1000, and ending up on the Mayflower
. Horwitz (Blue Latitudes
; Confederates in the Attic
) even dons conquistador gear, making the narrative surprisingly fun and funny, even as he spends a lot of time describing just how badly Columbus and subsequently the Spanish treated people. (Highpoint: a trip to a Columbus battle site in the Dominican Republic, when Horwitz gets stuck with a nearly inoperable rental car in a Sargasso Sea of traffic.) In the course of tracing the routes of de Soto in, for instance, Tennessee, and the amazing Cabeza de Vaca (Daniel Day Lewis’s next role?) in Tucson, Ariz., Horwitz drives off any given road to meet the back-to-the-land husband-and-wife team researching Coronado’s expeditions through Mexico; or the Fed Ex guy who may be a link to the lost colonists of the Elizabethan Roanoke expedition.
Horwitz can occasionally be smug about what constitutes custom—who’s to say that a Canadian tribe’s regular karaoke night isn’t a community-building exercise as valid as the communal sweat that nearly kills Horwitz early on in his thousands of miles of adventures? But as a character himself, he is friendly and always working hard to listen and bear witness. “I hate the whole Thanksgiving story,” says a newspaper editor of Spanish descent, a man he meets along the trail of Coronado. “We should be eating chili, not turkey. But no one wants to recognize the Spanish because it would mean admitting that they got here decades before the English.”
Robert Sullivan is the author of
Cross Country, How Not to Get Rich and
Rats (Bloomsbury). -
Publisher's Weekly
April 28, 2008
Horwitz was a smart choice to read his wonderful book about all he-and we-didn't know about American history, and he's done an excellent abridgement , choosing parts from his long work that work best in audio form. This is as far from a series of history lectures as most listeners could hope. Imagine meeting the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Confederates In The Attic at your favorite coffee shop and listening to him tell you, with a voice filled with amazement, a few of the surprising things he learned after visiting Plymouth Rock and realizing how little he knew of what happened in America before the Pilgrims arrived. This audio experience will have listeners hoping for a refill with Horwitz. A Holt hardcover (Reviews, Mar. 10).
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