Martin Dugard, The Last Voyage of Columbus: Being the Epic Tale
of the Great Captain’s Fourth Expedition, Including Accounts of Swordfight,
Mutiny, Shipwreck, Gold, War, Hurricane, and Discovery (New York & Boston:
Little, Brown and Company, 2005).
Also, Read by Simon Jones onTime Warner Audiobooks , for
Nook and Kindle.
(Non-Fiction)
Recommended by Wilda Morris
I found the recording of Martin Dugard’s book, The Last Voyage of Columbus, on sale at
my local public library. I almost passed it by because of the subtitle. But the
price was right and I wanted something to keep me awake while I was driving.
And yes, it is “an account of swordfight, mutiny, shipwreck,
gold, war, hurricane, and discovery.” It reads almost like a novel. Dugard has
suggested that it is “an adventure book,” which is a good description.
The book begins with Columbus imprisoned in his beloved
Santo Domingo on the Island of Hispaniola. His problems, Dugard says, “began
ironically, with his greatest success.” His royal sponsors, Ferdinand and
Isabella, who regretted the very generous contract they had made with him
before his first voyage across the Atlantic, seemed in no hurry to extricate
him from his current predicament.
Returned to Spain in chains, Columbus managed to convince
the sovereigns that their representative, Bobadilla, had exceeded his
authority. They ordered that his chains be removed, maybe in part because he was
making such a display of them, and getting a lot of sympathy from the people as
a result They summoned him to court to explain himself, sending a sizable sum
of money to pay for his travels to Granada where they were stationed at the
time. I won’t spoil the surprise of exactly what happened as he knelt before
Isabella. Suffice it to say, he was not re-incarcerated, and eventually they
backed his fourth and most thrilling, trying, and dangerous voyage.
In a discussion of the book at https://search.yahoo.com/search?p=martin+Dugard+The+Last+Voyage+of+Columbus&ei=UTF-8&fr=moz35,
the author says there are 900 books on Columbus listed on amazon.com, but his
was the first to focus almost entirely on this voyage. He developed some
admiration for the Admiral of the Ocean Sea whose leadership was tested in so
many ways on this fourth voyage, especially the year spent shipwrecked. Two of
the four ships Columbus had started out with had been lost and the other two
were riding very low in the water because ship worms were eating away at the
wood. Columbus beached the boats and kept the crew members on board for an
entire year until they were finally rescued. They could have been rescued much
sooner, but officials in Hispaniola didn’t want to rescue Columbus, for fear he
would try to retake his governorship of the island.
Want to read or listen to an exciting tale of adventure? I
recommend The Last Voyage of Christopher
Columbus.