Trozas

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Ivan R. Dee Publisher, 1998 - Fiction - 269 pages
With the first publication in English of Trozas, B. Traven's legendary Jungle Novels, an epic of the birth of the Mexican Revolution, are complete. Trozas is the fourth of the six Jungle Novels that describe the conditions of peonage and debt slavery under which Mexican Indians suffered during the reign of Porfirio D az. The main character of the novel is a young Indian named Andr s Ugaldo, a virtual slave worker in a monter a---mahogany plantation--which is purchased by the profit ?hungry Montellano brothers, widely despised for their brutal treatment of workers. The demands on Andr s and his companions exceed even the usual insufferable conditions in the monter a. Trozas (the word means "logs") captures the origins of the rebellious spirit that slowly spread through the labor camps and haciendas, culminating in the bloody revolt that ended D az's rule. Traven masterfully evokes the backbreaking daily routine of the monter a, brings alive the players in this sordid drama, and tells the story in riveting narrative.

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About the author (1998)

The mysterious B. Traven (1890-1969) was born in Chicago, spent his youth in Germany as an itinerant actor and revolutionary journalist, became a seaman on tramp steamers, settled in Mexico in the early 1920s, and began recording his experiences in novels and stories. In the United States his best-known novel is The Treasure of the Sierra Madre.

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