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This is perhaps one of my more personal books because it tells of
a special time in my life, living the adventure of an extraordinary
continent with the openness and sense of uncluttered excitement you
get when you're young still, and far away from home. It is
based on diaries I wrote while I worked as a journalist in Buenos
Aires, a good point of departure for further travels around South
America, from the Amazon jungle to Tierra del Fuego, via prairies,
and glaciers, and across the Andes. While the diaries were kept during
the 1980's-a period when South America remained a victim of
the Cold War and remained ruled mainly by military dictatorships-their
thoughts and observations produced, I hope, a timeless narrative,
made up of memorable characters and enduring landscapes and cultures.
I believe that South America remains one of the world's least
discovered continents. Travellers' tales may enrich our understanding,
but they have not tamed it. There are people I met who seemed to
straddle a strange world between reality and magic, like Tina, the
White Duchess of Platinov, and Sixto Vazquez, a man who held the
key to the mysteries of a lost tribe. Along the way I found myself
in situations not easy to forget-lost in the treacherous depths of
a Bolivian tin mine while following the spirit of Che Guevara, taking
a steam train up the Andes, shadowed by General Pinochet's
secret police in Chile, celebrating a wild New Year on a Pacific
beach, near the Equator. With this book, I want to take the reader
with me, tracing the footprints of history-conquest and subjugation,
defiance and hope-and encountering at each turn the unexpected.
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