The Loss of El Dorado
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The Loss of El Dorado, by the Nobel Prize winner V.S. Naipaul, is a history book about Venezuela and Trinidad. It was published in 1969. The title refers to the El Dorado legend. Naipaul looks at the Spanish/British colonial rivalry in the Orinoco basin, drawing on contemporary sources written in Spanish and English[1]. The book examines the obsessive quest for gold which was typical of the first Europeans to explore the region. In particular, Sir Walter Raleigh's voyages are examined with a psychological depth more typical of novels than historical works.
In the second half of the book the focus shifts to Trinidad which was under British rule from the end of the eighteenth century, but Naipaul also looks at Venezuela's wars of independence.
Like most of Naipaul's work, "The Loss of El Dorado" has received considerable critical recognition; however, the author has confessed to not being completely happy with his book. He reworked some of its material in a later book, A Way in the World, where historical narrative is treated in a different way, and is in part rendered as fiction.
[edit] References
- ^ According to Paul Theroux´s book "Sir Vidia's Shadow", Naipaul was assisted in his research by his first wife, Patricia Hale
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