FAWCETT, Brian (Ed.), Exploration Fawcett:
Journey to the Lost City of Z, arranged from the manuscripts, letters,
log-books and records of Col. Percy Fawcett, The
Overlook Press/Peter Mayer Publishers, Inc., New York, NY, USA, 2010
Trade octavo paperback, illustrated wrappers, 312pp., 16pp. of monochrome photographic
plates, one photographic illustration, a map, and many line drawings by Brian
Fawcett. As new.
I
know that Pagan Publishing did a piece on Fawcett in The Unspeakable Oath,
Number 16/17 (2001) and, to be honest that’s where I first heard about him. I
read another book concerning him later (see below) and so, my interest already
piqued, I fell upon this particular volume the moment I clapped eyes on it.
No
offence to Brian Appleton and Co. at the ‘Oath, but the sidebar treatment they
gave Colonel Fawcett was a bare scratching of the surface. If anyone needs a
template or role-model for the archetypical Mythos investigator, look no
further than this excellent tome. First published in 1953, Hemingway considered
it inspirational reading and kept it handy; many other readers compare it
favourably to Conrad’s Heart of Darkness which is a completely reasonable
accolade, although Fawcett’s observations are far darker and often more
disturbing than anything found in Conrad’s book.
Brian
Fawcett inherited his father’s papers and began reading them during the
two-hour siesta that interrupted his working day as an engineer in South
America. Over time, he collated them into the present volume and edited them
together as a compelling narrative complete with footnote annotations to
highlight various incidents and provide extra information. Pleasingly, the text
is not always smoothly joined together, and topics jump between paragraphs here
and there, however not in a way that interrupts the narrative too greatly;
rather these shifts emphasise that the work is a compilation from several
sources and underscore the admirable job that has been done in working the
whole into a single entity.
The
text covers Fawcett’s explorations into the Amazonian forests over the period
1907 to 1925, the year of his disappearance. His writings describe a lawless
and totally inhospitable frontier territory ruled by rubber entrepreneurs who
ruled their slave work-forces with whips and guns; he encounters wild animals
and Indians with poison arrows; he is attacked by giant spiders, monstrous
serpents and man-eating fish. Then there are hideous diseases. In fact, some of
the diseases that he mentions, while trying vainly to aid the afflicted, are enough
to give anyone nightmares: fungal lesions that cause faces to rot away; gastric
worms that force the afflicted to swallow mouthfuls of earth; and that bugbear
of Amazon travellers, the Candiru, a tiny barbed fish that lodges in the
orifices of the human body and causes massive internal infections.
"I visited a Frenchman in the Riberalta jail who had murdered his employer in a fit of jealousy. While imprisoned he was fed by his woman, whom one day he seized and strangled, and he was condemned to death. He escaped and fled into Brazil, thanks to the judge who sold him a file!"
The
focus of Fawcett’s travels in Brazil initially were the delimitation of the
boundaries between Bolivia and Brazil, a task given to the disinterested Brits
since their results would be impartial, and which would help ratify the rubber
boom taking place there. Thereafter, Fawcett turns his attention to the legends
of a massive lost city, remnant of an ancient, unrecorded civilisation and which
was stumbled upon by gold seekers in the 1700s. H. Rider Haggard (no less!)
gave Fawcett a strangely-conductive 10-inch tall basalt stone carving,
supposedly taken from this lost capitol, and he took it to several psychometric
readers to have it analysed: they told him sufficient to believe that he was on
the trail of the survivors of lost Atlantis. If that doesn’t sound like the
actions of a Mythos investigator, then I don’t know what does!
We’ll
never know what he found at the “Lost City of Z” because in 1925, he and his
eldest son vanished into the jungle, never to be heard of again. Some contend
that natives beset them and did away with them; however, Fawcett always made
sure to treat the indigenes of South America very well and had acquired a
reputation for doing so. Perhaps it was a misunderstanding. Otherwise, they may
have met with some terrible accident – a flash-flood, or the crumbling of a
rock face. Or perhaps they discovered some hidden secret at the City, something
that would not let them return to tell the tale? At the present time, no-one
can say.
Five
tentacled horrors.
Not
that the mystery was allowed to rest there. Other adventurers determined to
find out what happened to the Fawcetts and they set out to locate them.
Brazilian Adventure, Peter
Fleming
The
Reprint Society, Ltd. / Jonathan Cape, Ltd., London, 1940 (first published
1933)
Octavo;
blue cloth with gilt-lettered, black morocco spine label; 376pp., photographic
frontispiece, 2 maps and a monochrome diagram; top edge of the text block dyed
black. Binding rolled, corners bumped and spine sunned; preliminaries embrowned
and with some offsetting; edges toned. Lacks dustjacket. Else good.
Nowadays
the title of this book makes it sound like the re-telling of an unfortunate
proceeding at a beauty salon; however, we can move on past that barrier and
once more immerse ourselves in the jungles, insect swarms and plague-infested
wilderness of the Matto Grosso
In
1930, Peter Fleming answered an advertisement in the Times of London’s ‘Agony
Column’, seeking for brave adventurers to engage on a voyage to Brazil, there
to seek the truth about the disappearance of Col. Percy Fawcett. At that time a
literary editor for The Spectator, Fleming was almost immediately hooked by the
prospect and signed on.
Unlike,
Fawcett’s narrative, which resounds with doom and grim determination in the
face of adversity, Fleming’s tale is a completely different beast. Fleming is a
product of his time; an almost Bertie Wooster-like character, self-deprecating,
wryly amused and unwilling to take himself too seriously. Even through the most
desperate straits of his travels there is a solid vein of dry humour colouring
the re-telling, and this makes for vivid and very entertaining reading. As an
indication of his puckish nature, he even imitates the classic photograph of
Fawcett in the frontispiece of his own book, hands in pockets and complete with
the classic pipe.
Fleming
(younger brother of the far more self-important Ian Fleming and a far better
writer) never did find out conclusively what happened to Fawcett, but after
3,000 miles and the discovery of a new river tributary of the Amazon, he pens a
thrilling, amusing and highly entertaining narrative of his failed attempt full
of interesting observations.
I
give it three-and-a-half tentacled horrors
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