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Bolivar
Bolivar: American Liberator | Marie Arana
8 posts | 4 read | 9 to read
It is astonishing that Simón Bolívar, the great Liberator of South America, is not better known in the United States. He freed six countries from Spanish rule, traveled more than 75,000 miles on horseback to do so, and became the greatest figure in Latin American history. His life is epic, heroic, straight out of Hollywood: he fought battle after battle in punishing terrain, forged uncertain coalitions of competing forces and races, lost his beautiful wife soon after they married and never remarried (although he did have a succession of mistresses, including one who held up the revolution and another who saved his life), and he died relatively young, uncertain whether his achievements would endure. Drawing on a wealth of primary documents, novelist and journalist Marie Arana brilliantly captures early nineteenth-century South America and the explosive tensions that helped revolutionize Bolívar. In 1813 he launched a campaign for the independence of Colombia and Venezuela, commencing a dazzling career that would take him across the rugged terrain of South America, from Amazon jungles to the Andes mountains. From his battlefield victories to his ill-fated marriage and legendary love affairs, Bolívar emerges as a man of many facets: fearless general, brilliant strategist, consummate diplomat, passionate abolitionist, gifted writer, and flawed politician. A major work of history, Bolívar colorfully portrays a dramatic life even as it explains the rivalries and complications that bedeviled Bolívar’s tragic last days. It is also a stirring declaration of what it means to be a South American.
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WanderingBookaneer
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Graywacke
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Pickpick

That last chapter title is also the the title of the Gabriel Garcia Márquez novel that led me here.

This is a terrific book - well written to capture the nuances. Enthusiastic but constrained. His life was an adventure story. What can an author do but ride through it: fantastic failures and miraculous successes, depopulating violence and an end of slavery, one devoted with integrity to liberty, his legacy of corrupt dictatorships. A new world.

BarbaraBB Great review. Such an interesting man. 6y
Graywacke @BarbaraBB Thanks B! So true about Bolívar. 6y
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Graywacke
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Seriously, in the 1810‘s Bolívar was fighting (and lost to!!) the Legions of Hell, straight out of a Cormac McCarthy novel. A blond European madman led and accumulated thousands of mixed race and minority troops to overwhelm all other armies and literally wipe out entire villages through rape, pillage, and mass torturous executions. And they were unstoppable. It‘s hard to remember this is nonfiction sometimes.

Graywacke Just to be clear, Blood Meridian is tame in comparison, with a much smaller death count and possibly less grotesque paraphernalia. 6y
Graywacke And, I have to add, is this really true, or is this doctored history of the (eventual) victors? I‘m trusting Arana that it‘s true, but I‘m also finding it a little hard to believe. 6y
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Graywacke
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Admittedly, my first question about Bolívar was why couldn‘t he replicate the northern American revolution. Then I read this, on Caracas - and took a skeptical view. I‘m only now realizing how painfully true was this comment above.

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Graywacke
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Graywacke
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After The General in His Labyrinth, I looked up some books about Bolívar in my library. I‘m now reading (some of?) this.

BarbaraBB So interesting!! 6y
Graywacke @BarbaraBB so much I didn‘t know. Not just the details, but whole aspects of Venezuelan and royal Spanish life... 6y
BarbaraBB That must be interesting too. I am always fascinated that people in Latin America these days still wear shirts with his face on it and everyone calls him El Libertador. How history can live on! 6y
Graywacke @BarbaraBB I‘m curious about that too - well, I didn‘t know about the t-shirts - but how much of a hero he is. So far he‘s 15 and fantastically undisciplined 6y
BarbaraBB Well, I‘ll keep up with your posts, I am curious too about how he became this unforgettable hero! (edited) 6y
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Oblomov26
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Reviewed this recently, but saw #bookssetinsamerica #booktober and knew this had to be my pick. A book set in South America about the man who almost single handed created what we know as modern South America. Bolivar is an amazing figure, nobleman, soldier, politician, lover. A man who should be better known and remembered as the liberator of half a continent.

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Oblomov26
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I read "The General in his Labyrinth" many years ago and this book was fascinating in that it told the rest of the story. Bolivar was a colonial grandee married and widowed at a young age. Upon returning from Europe, a changed man he became the leader of the independence movement. Despite defeats

Oblomov26 And setbacks, leading a rag tag force of volunteers, gauchos and veterans from the Napoleonic wars he succeeded in free a significant portion of South America. Reaching an apex as president of this state his life ended on his way to exile. An incredible figure who should be better known 8y
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