The Apprentice Tourist
By Mário de Andrade
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
By Mário de Andrade
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
By Mário de Andrade
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
By Mário de Andrade
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
By Mário de Andrade
Read by André Santana and Elsa Lepecki Bean
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
By Mário de Andrade
Read by André Santana and Elsa Lepecki Bean
Introduction by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Translated by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Notes by Flora Thomson-DeVeaux
Category: Travel: Central & South America | Classic Nonfiction | Biography & Memoir | Indigenous Peoples' History
Category: Travel: Central & South America | Classic Nonfiction | Biography & Memoir | Indigenous Peoples' History
Category: Travel: Central & South America | Biography & Memoir | Indigenous Peoples' History | Audiobooks
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$17.00
Apr 04, 2023 | ISBN 9780143137351
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Apr 04, 2023 | ISBN 9780593511305
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Apr 04, 2023 | ISBN 9780593670286
396 Minutes
Buy the Audiobook Download:
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Praise
“The Apprentice Tourist shows Andrade’s fascination with Amazonian cultures—and his utter boredom with the government officials and elites who welcomed the group of travelers along the way. . . . [It] offer[s] an important corrective in bringing canonical Brazilian works into English.” —The New York Times
“A playful romp . . . The translator ha[s] done remarkable work, approaching the unruly text with joy and scholarship . . . fascination and care.” —Joy Williams, Book Post
“Farce from start to finish . . . Andrade . . . relay[s] details, with wide-eyed credulity, of his extraordinary encounters with indigenous communities, some partially real and others completely falsified, yet always well and truly beyond belief. . . . These as well as other outlandish events . . . Andrade recounts with the straightest of faces. . . . It was in the process of mythmaking that the country of Andrade’s imagination became more vivid, more alive.” —Prospect magazine
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