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"A memoir of an astonishing trip walking "nine million-odd steps" for
more than two years along the Amazon River's course from Peruvian
headwaters to Brazilian mouth. In this book about becoming the first
person to perambulate the Amazon's entire length, Stafford chronicles
the countless obstacles he faced, including canoes of armed indigenous
peoples, dehydration, sickness, lack of sleep (his insomnia caused "the
hopeless despair of seeing the sun rise when I had still not managed to
stop my brain racing") and overwhelming swarms of insects. In addition
to the stories of his impressive adventures, the author explores his
friendship with the longest lasting of his many walking companions,
Gadiel "Cho" Sanchez Rivera. Along the way, Stafford wonders if trying
to break a record is "selfish," and he acknowledges that those with
lofty goals occasionally occupy an "insular bubble of blinkered
determination." Not this author, however; faraway events and nightly
reading impacted him as much as immediate concerns of hunger. Stafford's
writing is lyrical and mostly engaging, and he offers numerous
anecdotes about how to survive in the wild. On the verge of starvation,
he and Cho found a tortoise, and the author's recounting of its
preparation is as engrossing as the meat was nourishing. Though boredom
threatened Stafford's appreciation of the unfamiliar, he was always able
to recapture the joy of discovery. For him, "everything is relative
and, when you've been walking for 639 days, a ten-day leg through
unknown jungle that no one in the village could remember being walked in
living history seemed nothing." A gripping celebration of physical and
mental endurance."( Kirkus Reviews)
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