
audiobook
A vivid 18th‑century travelogue brings listeners into the heart of Suriname and the remote interior of Guiana, where a seasoned captain spent five years navigating a land caught in revolt and exploration. From the restless coastlines to the impenetrable rain‑forests, his observations blend the urgency of a military campaign with the curiosity of a naturalist, offering a rare snapshot of a world on the brink of change.
The narrative is packed with detailed descriptions of swamps, savannas, and towering trees, alongside vivid accounts of the region’s birds, reptiles, and mammals. Equally compelling are the portrayals of the enslaved communities and the indigenous peoples, whose lives and customs are recorded with a respectful eye. Original engravings, drawn from the author’s own sketches, punctuate the story, giving listeners a visual sense of the exotic flora and fauna.
Beyond its adventure, the work serves as an important historical document, translated into clear, accessible language that lets modern ears hear the unvarnished truth of early colonial South America. It’s an engaging journey for anyone curious about the natural and human landscapes of that era.
Language
nl
Duration
~7 hours (416K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-05-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1744–1797
A soldier, traveler, and memoirist of the eighteenth century, he left one of the most vivid firsthand accounts of colonial Suriname. His writing is remembered for its mix of adventure, close observation, and unsettling testimony about slavery and violence.
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