The Darien Gap: Travels in the Rainforest of Panama
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About this book
Finalist for the 2009 Edna Staebler Award for Creative Non-Fiction If you want to drive from North America to South America youll have a hard time when you reach Panamas southernmost province Darien. The Pan-American Highway ends just sixty miles short of Colombia. Its the only missing link in what would otherwise be uninterrupted highway from Alaska to Tierra del Fuego. When Balboa marched through Dariens jungles to cross the narrow isthmus in 1513 he was the first European to sight the Pacific from its eastern shores. For the next four centuries pirates gold miners rebels and political schemers all gravitated to Darien. Scotland failed miserably in its attempt to establish a colony. An American Navy expedition wandered lost in its jungle for two months with seven men dying and countries fought to control the regions traffic and trade. Yet today Darien is best known as a roadless backwater home to native communities Colombian guerrillas and the descendants of black slaves and Spanish colonists. For twenty years Martin Mitchinson has travelled in Central and South America. Fascinated by tales of Darien he arrived aboard his 36-foot sailboat Ishmael and spent the next 18 months navigating physical challenges native politics and the constant risk of kidnapping. Mitchinson found temporary shelter in native communities while he followed footpaths through the rainforest and paddled a dugout canoe along Dariens rivers. With two Kuna guides he set off to follow Balboas historic route across the continental divide to the Pacific. Drawing on firsthand accounts and personal interviews to illuminate the history of the region and recounting his travels with extraordinary honesty and grace Mitchinson has produced the first of what we hope will be many fine travel narratives.
