The Mapmaker's Wife
A True Tale of Love, Murder, and Survival in the Amazon
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Narrated by:
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Eric Jason Martin
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By:
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Robert Whitaker
About this listen
In the early years of the 18th century, a band of French scientists set off on a daring, decade-long expedition to South America in a race to measure the precise shape of the earth. Like Lewis and Clark's exploration of the American West, their incredible mission revealed the mysteries of a little-known continent to a world hungry for discovery. Scaling 16,000-foot mountains in the Peruvian Andes, and braving jaguars, pumas, insects, and vampire bats in the jungle, the scientists barely completed their mission. One was murdered, another perished from fever, and a third - Jean Godin - nearly died of heartbreak. At the expedition's end, Jean and his Peruvian wife, Isabel Grameson, became stranded at opposite ends of the Amazon, victims of a tangled web of international politics. Isabel's solo journey to reunite with Jean after their calamitous 20-year separation was so dramatic that it left all of 18th-century Europe spellbound. Her survival - unprecedented in the annals of Amazon exploration - was a testament to human endurance, female resourcefulness, and the power of devotion.
Drawing on the original writings of the French mapmakers, as well as his own experience retracing Isabel's journey, acclaimed writer Robert Whitaker weaves a riveting tale rich in adventure, intrigue, and scientific achievement.
©2004 Robert Whitaker (P)2019 TantorWhat listeners say about The Mapmaker's Wife
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- Pamela
- 11-08-19
Mind-boggling Adventure.
I found this true story utterly gripping. Besides describing the experiences of a French scientific expedition to the equator in the early 1800’s to determine the the precise shape of the earth, it is also a tale of human endeavour in the most harrowing of conditions and circumstances by everyone concerned. We hear also about the survival in the Amazonian rain forest by a Peruvian woman seeking her missing French husband, a member of the expedition. Accompanied by her brothers, she starts out in silks and satins and ends up, after months, alone, in tatters, but she makes it out of there. Riveting stuff.
This is a book I would listen to again.
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