The Last Voyage of Columbus

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The Last Voyage of Columbus
In his book, Martin Dugard uses dramatic detail and imagery to attract the readers attention. At times it feels as though the book is even fiction, but the selected bibliography in the end, defend with certainty this books authenticity. If there were no speculations on the character of Columbus by the lector, then the book will leave the lasting impression that like us, Columbus was human as well. He was not a saint, and had his fallouts. His life was not a complete joy ride, but the ending of the book gives the reader the sense that Columbus was a man of exuberant character: “live a bold life rather than settle for mediocrity.”(p.268)
Divided into four sections: Prelude; Love Hope and Sex and Dreams; Paradise Lost; Adventures of a Perilous and Swashbuckling Nature; War; and finally, Cast Away, the order of the sections already give insight on the life that Columbus lead. At first his life was full of hope and ambition, through the first chunk Columbus’ life is depicted. Beginning with the voyage the whole world remembers, Dugard unveils sides of Columbus’ character that many readers weren't aware of. Columbus was exactly 41 when he sailed in 1492, he was an Italian vagabond who ironically was quite cheerful, confident, and at times prone to the occasional boast. At six feet tall, with a very cunning mind, he somehow seduced the most powerful woman in the world at that time: Queen Isabella. Columbus was married, and then widowed, to a woman named Felipa Puestrello y Mariz. In his youth, Columbus became interested in traveling the world because of a man named Marco Polo. In 1271, Marco Polo, traveled to china via ship and camel. He returned twenty four years later with more knowledge of the world than...

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...distant dream, it was on deck and burrowed within three hearts and minds. The Porras brothers soon got tired of waiting for something to happen, so they split from Columbus. By now Columbus had sent out Diego Mendez with a crew of Indians and a companion. Porras had no patience or mercy, they went out stealing from tribes and getting their hands on whatever they could find, food, water, and women. In the end the last chunk called Cast Away, Dugard ties up the story with a good ending. Columbus was not a man that would sit there stranded, and with nothing to do, like stated before, he was a guy who would “live a bold life rather than settle for mediocrity.”(p268.) Columbus was human, he failed and achieved, he had ambitions and desperate attempts to be accepted. Columbus, flaws and everything was a strong and brave man, who dared to live the way he loved, out at sea.

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