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A wandering journalist finds himself on the sun‑scorched rim of the Rio Grande, where the battered town of Ojinaga clings to a desert that seems to stretch forever. From the flat mud‑roof of the border post office he watches Federal troops digging shallow trenches, their white uniforms a stark contrast against the amber dunes, while distant clouds of gun‑smoke hint at an approaching storm. The landscape is both beautiful and brutal, a place where the silence of endless sand is broken only by the clatter of artillery and the restless hooves of cavalry patrols.
Amid this precarious backdrop, the narrator brushes shoulders with the fierce personalities that fuel the conflict—General Mercado, a beleaguered commander, and his rival General Orozco, whose hostility is palpable even in a curt refusal to grant an interview. Rumors of Pancho Villa’s victorious forces swirl through the camp, promising a new chapter in the revolutionary saga. Through vivid observations and candid encounters, the early pages capture the raw tension, the human drama, and the stark reality of a nation in the throes of upheaval.
Language
en
Duration
~7 hours (444K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2015-01-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1887–1920
A vivid eyewitness to revolution and war, this American writer turned frontline reporting into some of the most memorable political journalism of the early 20th century. He is best known for Ten Days That Shook the World, his firsthand account of the Russian Revolution.
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