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Benjamin Ivry

    1 de enero de 1958
    Las minas del rey Salomón
    Magellania
    • Magellania

      • 208 páginas
      • 8 horas de lectura

      Magellania —the region around the Strait of Magellan—is the home of Kaw-djer, a mysterious man of Western origin whom the indigenous people consider a demigod. A man whose motto is “Neither God nor master,” he has shunned Western civilization and its hypocrisies in order to live peacefully on an island claimed by no one. But when a storm strands a thousand immigrants on his island and they ask him to be the leader of their colony, Kaw-djer must decide whether to help them live and prosper in this foreign land at the end of the world or leave them to their fate. Jules Verne penned Magellania in 1897, following the death of his brother and at a time when his own health was beginning to fail. Originally titled Land of Fire and At the End of the World , Magellania was intended to reflect Verne’s deeply held religious and political beliefs as well as examine his own mortality. This first English translation of the original manuscript shows Magellania to be a unique, forceful novel that widens the scope of Verne’s literary legacy.

      Magellania2013
      3,0
    • A finales del siglo XIX, Haggard colocó en las tierras de África, en parte inexploradas, a Allan Quatermain, el cazador de elefantes, enrolado en un viaje erizado de dificultades en busca de las portentosas minas del rey Salomón. Una sucesión de peligros, ocasionados por la naturaleza, las fieras o los nativos —que no entienden la idolatría de los blancos por las piedras— se interpondrá en su camino. De todo esto surge una pregunta esencial: si la “civilización“ materialista y obsesionada por el dinero no será en el fondo más salvaje que esta tribus belicosas perdidas en el corazón de la selva.

      Las minas del rey Salomón2004
      3,9