.com Review
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An Best Book of the Month, March 2014: “I think I can make it.”
In 1961, while on an expedition to collect pieces for his
her’s Museum of Primitive Art, Michael Rockefeller and his
traveling companion were plunged into the warm waters off New
Guinea. The billionaire scion tied two empty cans to his body
for floatation and swam for shore, and by most accounts, he made
it. But what happened there, when he encountered members of the
Asmat tribe--a culture marked by ritual violence and
cannibalism--has been long debated. Did he disappear into the
tropical jungles, or was he rendered and eaten by the tribesmen,
as many speculated and the Rockefeller family long denied?
Award-winning journalist Carl Hoffman has stepped into
Rockefeller’s boot prints and Asmat society, interviewing
generations of warriors in an exhaustive and engrossing attempt
to solve the mystery. The result, Savage Harvest, succeeds not
only as a captivating and sensational puzzle, but also as a
(seemingly unlikely) modern adventure and a fascinating glimpse
of an anachronistic people pulled into the 20th century by the
tensions of global politics. So, did he make it? The title might
offer a clue. --Jon Foro
Simon Winchester
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Simon Winchester Reviews Savage Harvest: A Tale of Cannibals,
Colonialism, and Michael Rockefeller's Tragic Quest for Primitive
Art
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Carl Hoffman, who with his 2010 book The Lunatic Express
demonstrated himself to be a traveler of the greatest courage and
determination, as well as a writer of skill, has now made a
significant contribution to history. Savage Harvest, a narrative
that is as exciting as it is instructive, appears finally to have
winnowed the truth from the mare’s nest of legend and wishful
thinking surrounding the disappearance in November 1961, of
Michael Rockefeller, in a remote region of southwestern New
Guinea.The 23-year old, along with a Dutch anthropologist
colleague and two young guides, were sailing in a dugout
catamaran some three miles from the coast of Asmat. The craft
overturned; the two locals swam for help, but as the wreck
drifted farther from land an impatient Rockefeller decided to try
and make it alone. With two fuel cans to help his buoyancy on
what he reckoned would be a twenty-hour swim, he slid into the
warm shallows of the Arafura Sea - never to be seen by friends or
family again.Did he drown? Was he eaten by a shark? Did he vanish
into the jungle, Kurtz-like? Or was he the victim of cannibalism
at the hands of coastal villagers? Hoffman has shown that with
assiduous tradecraft, hard work and near-obsessive tenacity, it
is possible to know, to solve the supposedly insoluble. He has
journeyed, twice now, deep into the dark interiors of Asmat, and
has conducted interviews and learned the language and listened to
sensible men and women – in New Guinea, in the Netherlands, in
the anthropology departments of knowledgeable universities. And
he has used a severe intelligence to determine just what happened
on that warm dawn Monday, November 20, 1961.The Rockefellers –
not least Michael’s twin sister Mary, who produced her own book
two years ago – may not want to believe this tale; and the family
did nothing to help Hoffman in his admirable quest. But the
truth, as this book chronicles in patient, meticulous detail, has
a way of eking itself out. Savage Harvest is a remarkable
testament to the revealed truth, and of its revealing - even if
that truth is wholly bizarre and, to most, quite literally
unpalatable.
Simon Winchester is the accled author most recently of The
Men Who United the States as well as Atlantic, The Professor and
the Madman, The Man Who Loved China, A Crack in the Edge of the
World, and Krakatoa, all of which were New York Times
bestsellers. In 2006 Mr. Winchester was made an officer of the
Order of the British Empire (OBE) by Her Majesty the Queen. He
resides in western Massachusetts.
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*Starred Review* Award-winning travel writer
Hoffman’s (The Lunatic Express, 2010) penchant for extremes
fueled his demanding quest for the truth about Michael
Rockefeller’s disappearance in New Guinea in 1961. Freshly
graduated from Harvard and eager to emulate his art collector
her, Nelson Rockefeller, then governor of New York, Michael
became enthralled with the Asmat’s extraordinary wood carvings
and was dashing from village to village, buying as many pieces as
he could find, when his boat capsized in rough seas. Death by
drowning was the official finding, but rumors of a far more
horrific e persisted. After arduous sojourns among the
enigmatic Asmat, Hoffman came to understand how their ancient
cosmology was enacted through “reciprocal violence,” headhunting,
and cannibalism. He also realized just how risky Rockefeller’s
buying spree was, given the bloody conflicts raging between the
Asmat and the Dutch colonial authorities, and how little the
novice collector knew about the spiritual significance of the art
he was acquiring, including monumental works on display in the
Metropolitan Museum of Art. By dint of grueling fieldwork,
startling archival discoveries, revelatory visits with a Dutch
missionary relieved to break his 50-year silence, profound
ins, and muscular writing, Hoffman tells the unforgettable
story of a soothing and politically expedient cover-up and a
brutal and tragic collision of cultures. --Donna Seaman
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