Written by Martin Dugard - Audio book performed by Simon Jones - Abridged Fiction - 5 COMPACT DISCS - 6 hours Publisher, Hachette Audio (June 2005) Listen to an audio clip NOTE: You will need RealPlayer Basic to listen. It's FREE ! Listen to a Windows Media audio clip. Being the Epic Tale of the Great Captain's Fourth Expedition, Including Accounts of Swordfight, Mutiny, Shipwreck, Gold, War, Hurricane, and Discovery The epic, never-before-told story of Columbus’s final, and perhaps greatest, journey to the New World. The final voyage of Christopher Columbus was by far his most dangerous, unexpected, exhilarating, and consequential. It was, as Pulitzer Prize-winner Samuel Eliot Morison put it, “a story of adventure which imagination could hardly invent; a struggle between man and the elements, in which the most splendid manifestations of devotion, loyalty and courage are mingled with the vilest human passions. Shockingly, no book has been written about this fateful final journey until now. Martin Dugard finally brings to light this saga of shipwreck, mutiny, discovery, and political treachery—telling the story of how Columbus’s quest to find a passage to the Orient drove him onward in the face of peril. Here we meet Christopher Columbus, the determined, and sometimes desperate, elder adventurer—a far cry from the shrouded hero/villain of legend. THE LAST VOYAGE OF COLUMBUS offers up the long-lost last chapter in the life of a man whose story we only thought we knew. About the Author: I was born in Maine, the son of a career Air Force pilot. Growing up, I lived on bases in New Hampshire, Indiana, Nebraska, California, Louisiana, Michigan, and back to California. I can vividly remember falling asleep each night to the thunderous roar of B-52 engines on the nearby flight line. Education was the usual elementary school, junior high, and high school stuff, followed by nine solid years of bacchanal that I like to refer to as "college. The bulk of my learning during that time took place out of the classroom. I waited tables and tended bar in Newport Beach by night, then spent my days surfing, listening to a lot of loud music and reading pretty much every book I could get my hands on. I'm not sure whether it was Hemingway or Hunter S. Thompson or Bruce Springsteen whose voice did the trick, but at some point I knew I wasn't destined for the corporate world. Having said that, the first thing I did after finally graduating (my Mother had all but given up on that ever happening, and at one point seriously suggested I run off and join the circus—which, when you think about it, would be a cool way to pass a couple years) was get married and get a nine-to-five job in procurement for a Fortune 100 engineering company. This poor career choice led to a deep and abiding depression. Realizing it was cheaper (and quicker) than therapy, I paid a career counselor several hundred dollars to tell me something that I should have already known: the way to get happy was to become a writer. It wasn't as simple as just up and quitting the corporate gig, of course, but I soon began writing magazine stories on the side to indulge the writing jones. I wrote in the mornings, before work. Then I began writing at work, too (I was, perhaps, the worst employee ever in this history of corporate America). Then one day I got a call, asking if I would be interested in flying to Madagascar for three weeks to cover an adventure race. This would involve quitting my corporate job. Even though I wasn't making enough money as a writer to pay all the bills, my wife and I agreed this was a leap of faith we needed to take. I got on that plane. Without intending to, I became an adventure writer through the Madagascar trip, and spent the next five years traveling the world to cover and compete in races like Eco-Challenge and Raid Gauloises. I sailed from Genoa to Mallorca aboard a tall ship (Columbus was born in Genoa), flew around the world in an Air France Concorde at twice the speed of sound (setting an around-the-world speed record in the process), and lived six weeks on Survivor island for the filming of that show's first incarnation. As exciting as all that was, my kids were getting older and needed me around more, so I decided to forgo the adventure world to indulge my passion for history. I envisioned a more tranquil authorly lifestyle. This led me to nearly get killed by a New Zealand logging truck while writing about Captain Cook (Farther Than Any Man), get arrested and nearly killed in Africa while writing about Stanley and Livingstone (Into Africa), and stumble quite accidentally into unauthorized, after-hours tour of the Alhambra in Granada. So much for the tranquil lifestyle. I became something of a research fiend in the process, especially at the British Library. I rarely saw the inside of the library when I was in college. Nowadays you can't get me out of them. The education part of all that is minimal, on the surface but it gives you an overview of the things I learned that aren't so tangible: perseverance, passion, introspection, faith. Those attributes, as much as any amount of research, go into each of my books. I've lived in Orange County, California since 1981. FAVORITE AUTHORS: Ernest Hemingway, Jan Morris, Bill Bryson, Anne Lamott, William F. Buckley. Hunter S. Thompson, Sebastian Faulks, and Irwin Shaw, James Salter is America's finest living writer, and I long to string together words as succinctly and beautifully as he. I have read and reread Anthony Bourdain's Kitchen Confidential, Peter Mayle's A Year in Provence, and Michael Herr's Dispatches. CURRENTLY READING: I tend to keep books scattered about my house and in my car. So right now it's The Long Way Home by Jim Harrison, The Blue Nile by Alan Moorehead, and Anne Lamott's Plan B. About the Narrator: Simon Jones is an actor whose Broadway credits include roles in The Real Thing, Benefactors, The School for Scandal, The Herbal Bed, and Waiting in the Wings (Outer Critics Circle nominee). Off-Broadway credits include: Woman in Mind, Terra Nova, Privates On Parade (Drama Desk nominee). Film and TV highlights: Monty Python's The Meaning of Life, Brazil, Twelve Monkeys, The Devil's Own, and The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy. He is co-artistic director of TACT (The Actor's Company Theatre) and lives in Manhattan with his wife Nancy and son Timothy. |
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