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General from the Jungle [Paperback]

B. Traven , R.L. Lujan
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 280 pages
  • Publisher: Allison & Busby; New edition edition (4 Aug 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 085031447X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0850314472
  • Product Dimensions: 19.4 x 12.8 x 2.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,346,941 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Product Description

After years of oppression, the Indians, led by a charismatic 21-year-old they call simply "General", march out of the jungles of southern Mexico to overthrow the dictator and secure land and freedom for themselves.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
'General from the Jungle' is the last of Traven's 'jungle novels' and provides an explosive climax to its preceding volumes 'Government,' 'The Carreta,' 'Trozas,' 'March to the Monterias' and 'Rebellion of the Hanged.'

The story takes place at the outbreak of the Mexican Revolution and follows the fortunes of an army of former slaves from the Monterias (the harsh, inhuman mahogony plantations of Mexico under the dictatorship), who having revolted against their masters, set out on the quest for 'Tierra y Libertad' - Land and Freedom.

Traven writes with what seems to be an amazing simplicity that never fails to convey the most complex of ideas, emotions and human understanding. And that is where Traven is best - he really knows people, from the petty tyrant to the indian peasant struggling for a better life. Yet he never sentimentalises the revolutionary heroes, the downtrodden, the indians with whom his real sympathies lie. The extreme oppression and cruelty that fill the pages of 'General' and the other 'jungle novels' are nevertheless offset with the feeling of optimism, the knowledge that better days will come - thus uplifting what might otherwise be a heavy read.

I have to say that this is my favourite of the 'jungle novels', which is one reason I've given it five stars. However, the other five are also superb and give a real sense of background to 'General from the Jungle.'

The novels are not directly connected either, so they can be read in any order... which is useful to know if any of them are not available!

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Amazon.com:  4 reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
Liberation comes at last, but man's heart remains dark 11 May 2005
By C. B Collins Jr. - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
This book is the sixth of Ben Traven's Jungle Novels. If you read all six, you would have completed around 1500 pages. Is it worth it? I would like to answer that question by reflecting on "General from the Jungle" and then reflecting on the entire series as a whole.

General From the Jungle is about revolution. It is about the strategy of warfare and the strategy of reaching the hearts and minds of peasants. It tells the tale of 600 debt slave Indians who emerge from totally inhumane work conditions on mahogany plantations to take over farms and villages until they hear that the dictator of Mexico, Diaz, has escaped to England.

Many of the characters from previous stories are here again. Cleso, Modesta, Andreas are all here. However a new character, Juan Mendez arrives, a young Indian chieftan with military training, who leads this rag tag band to victory after victory against the federales and rurales.

But remember that Traven's idology drives the story and many of our old friends from the previous novels only play bit parts, since the general and the revolution are actually the main characters. As General Mendez wins small victory after small victory, ever increasing military forces are sent against him. It is the psychology of the defeated Mexican military officers that offers fascinating reading in this final novel. As Traven brings the book to an end, he must bring nasty disgrace, complete misery, and painful torture to the Mexican military officers that are defeated by the revolution. The final chapters of the book are fascinating and painful to read since Traven must establish a sense of justice by balancing the evil done ot the Indians with the violence of disgrace against the Mexican military officers. Men have the ability to paln and implement the most disgraceful and demeaning tortures for each other which wring the last drops of human dignity from the victims. The book is fascinating and the final third is so engrossing that you can't put the book down.

Once you have finished the 6 books however you can look back at the strengths and weaknesses of this massive literary work. There are real strengths to this series. Traven's writing is spare and to the point. Yet he spends time telling the reader about the culture and psychology of the oppressor and the oppressed. You will understand debt slavery and the minds of the masters and slaves thoroughly when you finish the series. Traven was driven however to illustrate his world view and ideology and thus his characters are somewhat like puppets to illustrate his views about dictatorship, and racism, and man's inhumanity to his fellow man.

The 6 novels shine brightest when he allows himself to fully explore man's inhumanity to man. Here Traven knows the depth of sadism and the depths of depersonalization for those who are victims of abuse and torture. Traven recognizes that those in power become just as miserable as their victims when power corrupts them and enhances their sadism.

Thus in the end, it is when Traven wishes to make an ideological point that he ignores character and his writing is at the weakest (despite the fact that his message is extremely valid). It is when he has man face man in psychologial confrontation of oppressor and oppressed, victim and torturer, master and slave, that he reveals his exceptional insight into the depths of human cruelty.

This final novel deserves 5 stars and the entire series deserves five stars also. These books are underestimated masterpieces.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
B. Traven 25 Dec 2007
By Danny E. Stiens - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
I am half way through the six "Jungle Novels" and I find that Traven is a bit of a mixture of Hemmingway and Steinbeck, with a James Michner approach to historical narrative. This is the best way I have found yet to see inside prerevolution Mexico; to understand why it happened and why Mexico is the way it is, in many ways, today still the same.
Best enjoyed with a bottle of old comiteco 5 Oct 2011
By McTeague - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
As everyone knows, this is the last of the six Jungle Novels of B. Traven. I was very surprised that a series of novels that begins with a profound and frightening dissection of Mexican debt slavery, and spends several books basically crawling on its belly through the jungle, should end with this rousing military adventure, and I was certainly not disappointed. In fact, while I was reading this book I was so impressed with the military campaign it describes, and so entertained, that I imagined that Napoleon himself would have enjoyed it.

So kick back, roll yourself a cigar, pour yourself a glass of old comiteco and enjoy.
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