AnyBook4Less.com
Find the Best Price on the Web
Order from a Major Online Bookstore
Developed by Fintix
Home  |  Store List  |  FAQ  |  Contact Us  |  
 
Ultimate Book Price Comparison Engine
Save Your Time And Money

Comparison is already in progress.
In order to view results of comparison
please select your delivery details and preferences:

Title: Conquest of New Spain
by Bernal Diaz, Bernal Diaz Del Castillo, J. M. Cohen
ISBN: 0140441239
Publisher: Viking Press
Pub. Date: August, 1963
Format: Paperback
Volumes: 1
List Price(USD): $13.00
Amazon Price(USD): $13.00
Your Country
Currency
Delivery
Include Used Books
Are you a club member of: Barnes and Noble
Books A Million Chapters.Indigo.ca

Average Customer Rating: 5

Customer Reviews

Rating: 5
Summary: Amazing and Compelling
Comment: I really enjoyed reading this book for several reasons. Generally Bernal Diaz has been criticized for his bias in writing about what happened in the conquest of New Spain. However, on closer inspection, you find that he is genuine is his feelings and attitude about the events. He is not the most eloquent writer (afterall he is a soldier, and nearly 80 when writing), but he just writes what he saw.

Anyhow, in regards to the format of this book, I think Penguin did a good job editing the sections and summarizing the sections that detracted from the story. What you are left with are the essential parts of Bernal Diaz's text, and with it, and exciting story of a small band of Conquistadors who took on a huge empire and won.

I felt that I also learned a great deal about the Aztecs themselves from this book. Bernal, when writing, was very attendant to detail, and really painted a fascinating picture of a culture entirely seperate from the Old World, but no less grand.

I definitely recommend this book. There is simply no better way to find out what happened when Spain came to the New World than from the eyes of a Conquistador who was there.

Rating: 5
Summary: Bernal in the eyes of Luis Cardoza y Aragón.....
Comment: Let me share with you one of the most beautiful reveiws of Bernal's epic, writen by the great Guatemalan writer and poet Luis Cardoza y Aragón (from his book "Guatemala: The Lines of Her Palm", translated into English by Michelle Suderman): I started leafing through The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico at my student's desk, at night by lamplight. I skimmed summaries, the odd page, then began my reading in an orderly fashion. Tirelessly, I penetrated further and further into the enchanted forest, mesmerized by the story and by this encounter with my warrior culture, with the conquest. I was entering a distant and fascinating world. I witnessed and experienced the legendary campaign. I saw and heard it. I smelled its odor of iron, gunpowder and tired bodies. I was awed by the descriptions of Tenochtitlan, the markets and Moctezuma's court. The blood looked fresh on the steps of the pyramids. As Humboldt points out, the exhilaration of a newly discovered world is better transmitted by chroniclers than by poets. My first contact with this work was positively prodigious. Exhaustion came after reading for many hours without being able to stop. Captivated by descriptions and memories, I kept going, reading a little more, just a little more. I finally left off when the light of the new day began singing in my window. This is the most comprehensive work on the conquest of America, though it speaks only of New Spain. It contains a wealth of information, and details of all orders, that we do not find in posterior writings on related events-not even adding them together. It was written in Antigua Guatemala, where Díaz del Castillo took up residence in 1545 at the age of forty-nine, and where he died in 1584 after having lived there for about thirty-nine years. He was an old man when he wrote his Discovery and Conquest, nearly half a century after the siege of Mexico Tenochtitlan and the conquest of Guatemala. Bernal Díaz del Castillo's chronicle is the most important and engaging of all, the most truthful and comprehensive account of the conquest of America. He wrote it not only in his quest for truth, to refute the chronicles of Cortés's chaplain, Gómara, and his followers, but out of a need to relive the conquest, out of the same hunger that engendered Don Quixote in Cervantes. Old wounds were opened as he wrote: he himself confesses that he slept with his arms loaded, and that in his old age, he slept fully dressed, accustomed to the exhausting days he spent in Mexico. He was twice conqueror, but the true conquest was the one he carried out seated at his desk, still wearing armor, but no longer wielding the saber.

There are very close ties between this work and the author's life. There was nothing else he could have written. His heart was spilling over with it. Chroniclers would write of the Peru campaigns, campaigns against Turkey, Flanders or Italy, of strangers fighting strangers. Díaz del Castillo wrote about his life and about the land where he placed it at risk countless times. That is what makes his work unique, superior to the writings of historians for the perfect spontaneity of his testimony. He is the unknown soldier, the sweating troops bearing their arms and spoils, walking alongside the chief's mount; through him, they were given a voice, immortality. Pen in hand, he became the great adventurer, with the same fury as when he wielded his sword, with the faith that made his companions envision St James slaughtering Indians in the name of the Lord. He left us the conquest, fresh and bloody, gasping for all eternity.

Rating: 5
Summary: Amazing story
Comment: Fantastic account of the trials and tribulations of Cortez and his soldiers. The determination of Cortez to succeed even in the face of defeat makes for an unforgetable story. Diaz's account makes this a hard book to set down. A must read for anyone interested in the subject

Similar Books:

Title: The Discovery and Conquest of Mexico 1517-1521
by Bernal Diaz Del Castillo, Bernal Diaz Del Castillo, Hugh Thomas
ISBN: 0306806975
Publisher: Da Capo Press
Pub. Date: April, 1996
List Price(USD): $18.50
Amazon Price(USD): $12.95
Title: The Broken Spears : The Aztec Account of the Conquest of Mexico
by Miguel Leon-Portillo
ISBN: 0807055018
Publisher: Beacon Press
Pub. Date: May, 1992
List Price(USD): $17.50
Amazon Price(USD): $17.50
Title: Letters from Mexico
by Hernan Cortes, Anthony Pagden, J. H. Elliott
ISBN: 0300037996
Publisher: Yale Univ Pr
Pub. Date: January, 1987
List Price(USD): $25.00
Amazon Price(USD): $17.50
Title: Imperial Spain 1469-1716
by John H. Elliott
ISBN: 0140135170
Publisher: Penguin USA (Paper)
Pub. Date: December, 1990
List Price(USD): $16.00
Amazon Price(USD): $11.20
Title: Conquest: Montezuma, Cortes, and the Fall of Old Mexico
by Hugh Thomas
ISBN: 0671511041
Publisher: Touchstone Books
Pub. Date: April, 1995
List Price(USD): $20.00
Amazon Price(USD): $14.00

Thank you for visiting www.AnyBook4Less.com and enjoy your savings!

Copyright� 2001-2021 Send your comments