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The book never explained why Jerome Witt (the protagonist) acted in this fashion. It seemed that this was part of his character - a man of integrity who would never shirk his duty or abandon his ideals.
This book was also a great detective or suspense novel. The ending is stunning! I highly recoomend this book
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Koning takes the revered Samuel Eliot Morrison to task for his sanitized portrait of the Great Explorer. Most reprehensive, in Koning's view, is Morrison's utter disregard for the death and destruction left in Columbus's wake and to which he was a party. Seemingly, Morrison's brand of biographical myopia represents a particularly deadly brand of Western ideology at work, one that cleans up the official record on behalf of the powers that be.
Perhaps most praiseworthy in Koning's tratment are the succinct moral parallels he draws between the civilizing forces of Spain in the New World and their 20th century American counterparts in Vietnam, where additional tens of thousands were slaughtered resisting Western conquest. A book like this exposes unmistakably the self-serving mythology that surrounds so much of our official history. Such versions are not misleading by accident, instead they work to a purpose and there seems no better word for describing that purpose than ideological. They are distortions that preserve current institutions of power; namely, those political and economic arrangements that also happen to be products of Columbus's bloody wake. It's interesting to speculate the direction our polity would take were Koning's book, rather than the traditional sanitized versions, required reading in the nation's high schools. Be that as it may, don't expect to see Koning in a Columbus Day parade any time soon.
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The conflict imagined in this novel is of the sort that dominated Western history from 1848 through the present. Koning is very much on the side of the revolutionaries -- who would dare to call them "terrorists?" -- but he is never blind to their weaknesses and failings.
In 1970, this novel was made into a first-rate if underappreciated film starring Oscar-winner Jon Voight as the title character.
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Published in 1952, this fiction was considered as masterpiece of one of the most important writers of the modern Dutch literature era, Albert Alberts. In 1939, he was posted in Sumenep Madura East Java and lived a paradise-like life. His dream turned into nightmare in 1942, he was captured by the Japanese soldiers. Transferred from one cell to another, he almost lost his life. He became free when the Japanese fled from Indonesia. After a year of uncertain life during the power-shift from Dutch to England, he decided to return. In the Netherlands, he published 'The Islands'. He became a journalist and an editor of a local newspaper in 1953-1964, following the same path Hemingway once took, and wrote mostly about Indonesian politics. In 1975, Alberts received a prestigious Constantijn Huygens Prize award.
Via 'The Islands' we can look into the life of a conqueror, on how he scrutinized the islands to exploit and on how he deconstructed his values along with his interactions with the locals. From these short stories, we can look on how a simple man tried to cope his loneliness, on how the ugliness of his exhaustion transformed into a weave of reminiscences.
His personal touches is obvious in Alberts' ignorance to write complete his sentences with 'subjects' or 'predicates'. He didn't care to place the islands in the structure of reality. Only in one of 11 short stories, did Alberts state the island's name (and it's an imaginative one). Alberts let his readers to freely interpret the context of time and space. Therefore, the editor completed Alberts' work by giving 9 pages of footnotes, 7 pages of preface and 21 pages of introduction.
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