"Into the Amazon is an unparalleled gift to anyone who wants to understand the rainforest, Brazil, early environmentalism, or the struggle for Indigenous land rights. Larry Rohter’s rigorous and eloquent account of Cândido Rondon’s life provides a window into the colonization of the Amazon and a portrait of a soldier whose vision for human decency and nature protection is only gaining in relevance as we navigate the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss."
"In Larry Rohter, Cândido Rondon has finally found not just a worthy biographer but a brilliant one. An exceptionally skilled researcher and a dazzling writer, Rohter unearths vital new information that sweeps readers up in astonishing tales of discovery, courage, and humanity. This is an irresistible read."— Candice Millard, author of River of Doubt: Theodore Roosevelt’s Darkest Journey
"Rohter’s subject emerges as a man ahead of his time.… In showcasing this ‘humanist, nonviolent, multicultural template,’ Into the Amazon offers a valuable model for the future. The world needs more Rondons—a truth this important biography reinforces on every page."— Oliver Balch Times Literary Supplement
"Larry Rohter has written a masterful biography of Cândido Rondon, one of the most extraordinary characters to emerge out of the Americas in the last century and a half. A heroic figure of epic proportions, Rondon is synonymous with the exploration of the Brazilian Amazon. But he was much more than that. One part John Muir, one part Alexander von Humboldt, and one part Mahatma Gandhi, Rondon also left behind a rare personal legacy of humanism that feels both hugely relevant and sorely lacking today, with the fate of the Amazon and its Indigenous inhabitants hanging in the balance as never before. Into the Amazon is beautifully written, impressively researched, and makes for compelling reading. Larry Rohter has performed a great service by bringing Rondon, unsung for too long outside of Brazil, to a much wider audience. ¡Viva Rondon!"— Jon Lee Anderson, author of Che: A Revolutionary Life
"Into the Amazon is an unparalleled gift to anyone who wants to understand the rainforest, Brazil, early environmentalism, or the struggle for Indigenous land rights. Larry Rohter’s rigorous and eloquent account of Cândido Rondon’s life provides a window into the colonization of the Amazon and a portrait of a soldier whose vision for human decency and nature protection is only gaining in relevance as we navigate the twin crises of climate change and biodiversity loss."— John W. Reid, coauthor of Ever Green: Saving Big Forests to Save the Planet
"A welcome, vivid portrait of a historical figure who deserves much wider recognition outside his native country."— Kirkus Reviews, starred review
"Rohter’s thorough research and eye for detail make for a vivid telling of a remarkable tale. This is a trip well worth taking."— Publishers Weekly, starred review
★ 2023-02-01
Comprehensive biography of a Brazilian hero whose history is largely, unjustly unknown.
Cândido Mariano da Silva Rondon (1865-1958), writes former New York Times Rio de Janeiro bureau chief Rohter, was definitively a man of parts. Of mixed Indigenous, Portuguese, and Spanish descent, he guided an exhausted Theodore Roosevelt on his 1914 Amazon expedition and then returned immediately to a long project of stringing telegraph lines across the Brazilian jungle, “much of it across terrain inhabited only by hostile or uncontacted Indian tribes.” Rondon—for whom the vast Brazilian state of Rondônia is named—counseled that these tribes should be treated with dignity and left alone, and he forbade members of his exploratory expeditions from firing on them. Over decades as an army officer, scholar, and activist, he was successful not just in building telegraph lines, the first step in linking remote sections of a far-flung nation, but also in establishing preserves for Indigenous peoples after “finding a way into a place that no one, not even Native peoples living nearby, had ever braved.” A larger-than-life character overshadowing even Roosevelt, Rondon was silenced by a succession of dictators against whom his commitment to logical positivism and moral solutions to political problems didn’t stand much of a chance. Sidelined and stripped of his rank as general, he had to watch as the environmental protection agencies he helped create were dismantled and his beloved Amazon invaded by miners, loggers, and settlers, with disastrous consequences for the Native peoples of the region. However, he was such an effective diplomat and Indigenous rights advocate that Albert Einstein nominated Rondon for a Nobel Peace Prize, calling him “a philanthropist and leader of the first order.” As Rohter notes in this lively biography, long after his death, Rondon “remains a combatant through the relevance of his ideas.”
A welcome, vivid portrait of a historical figure who deserves much wider recognition outside his native country.
2024 Massachusetts Book Award, Long-listed