
A series of vivid letters written during a year‑long trek across South America offers listeners a window into a world that was, for many Europeans, still largely unknown. The author recorded his thoughts as he left each port and city, never following a fixed itinerary but letting the road decide the next destination. His candid observations—filled with curiosity, humor, and occasional self‑deprecation—capture the immediacy of travel in the early twentieth century, making the narrative feel like a personal diary shared across the seas.
The letters wander from the Atlantic coast of Madeira through Brazil’s bustling carnival streets, across the Argentine pampas, and into the soaring Andes of Bolivia and Chile. Along the way, he sketches encounters with indigenous Araucanian communities, describes the rugged salt‑peter towns, and notes quirky details such as alligator hunts in Panama. Accompanied by a modest collection of photographs, the collection balances scholarly restraint with genuine wonder, providing an engaging portrait of landscapes, cultures, and the spontaneous spirit of exploration.
Language
de
Duration
~6 hours (386K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2017-08-23
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1880–1934
A Russian-born writer, translator, and music critic, he is best remembered for preserving Sergei Rachmaninoff’s memoirs in book form. His career moved between literature and music journalism, giving his work a vivid, firsthand feel.
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