“Every so often a book comes along that forces all of us to shift perspectives, embrace new paradigms, deny much of what we have learned in order to relish in the wonder of the new. Susana B. Hecht as a scholar and author has always been a catalyst of fresh dreams, a fountain of new and raw intellectual insights. Her latest book is a work of wonder, a fusion of literary history, poetic reflections, and unshackled anger. I cannot say enough in praise of her scholastic audacity, integrity, and devotion.”
— Wade Davis, National Geographic Society
“Susanna Hecht’s wonderfully ambitious book unveils an unknown chapter in the history of the Amazon—indeed, the history of the world. The Scramble for the Amazon would be important if it merely showed how Euclides da Cunha, almost unknown to Americans but one of Latin America’s greatest writers, was also a significant figure in political and environmental history. But it uses da Cunha and his unfinished masterwork, Lost Paradise, to show how Amazonia played a central role in global politics a century before rock stars began staging ‘save the rain forest’ concerts. As a bonus to readers, her translations of da Cunha’s brilliant Amazonian writings are excellent, and the sadly moving love story at the center of his life—key to understanding his work—is artfully woven into the rest of the material.”
— Charles C. Mann, author of 1491: New Revelations of the Americas before Columbus
“Susanna B. Hecht’s extraordinary book is as penetrating and graceful as its subject matter: the lost writings of Euclides da Cunha on the Amazon. Indeed, Hecht is our modern-day da Cunha, presenting the miraculous forest and its people in all its complex wonder. And she throws in a tragic love story to boot. The Scramble for the Amazon and the ‘Lost Paradise’ of Euclides da Cunha is a truly remarkable book, destined to be a classic.”
— Greg Grandin, author of Fordlandia: The Rise and Fall of Henry Ford’s Forgotten Jungle City
“This majestic book—a monumental labor of love—is like nothing else written about Amazonia. A richly detailed survey that locates regional history in the complex matrix of colonial competition, it vividly brings to life a singular and singularly important figure in Brazilian literary history. There is a standard hyperbole that a book will change our view of a given topic, but this time, in many ways both large and small, it’s unquestionably true.”
— Hugh Raffles, author of In Amazonia: A Natural History
“A vividly detailed account of the complex interactions of the diverse Amazon dwellers of the late 19th through early 20th centuries, including native people, descendants of runaway slaves, rubber barons, peasant rubber tree tappers, ranchers, scientists, explorers, and the Brazilian military. . . . This scholarly but accessible work about an individual now somewhat forgotten to history will be of greatest interest to scholars and . . . Brazilian and Amazonian history enthusiasts.”
— Elizabeth Salt, Library Journal
“A journey into South America’s heart of darkness.”
— Nature
“Hecht writes not only with extraordinary historical assurance about her remarkably complex subject, but also with great passion and literary elegance. The book is, like da Cunha’s own work, the product of years of mediation, and brings together Hecht’s political-ecological research on and in Amazonia with a lot of archival spadework. There is also elegance of characterisation: not all academic authors would dare to describe their subject as having ‘the lambent eyes of a nocturnal animal.’ Hecht does, she is right, and the reader is grateful for her authorial courage. . . . Da Cunha’s remarkable fusion of the scholarly and the literary with all its acuity and also its eccentricities is matched by Hecht’s; style mirrors subject.”
— Robert J. Mayhew, Times Higher Education
“This is an exhaustive and highly original book that sheds light on little-known aspects of both da Cunha's life and the region's history.”
— Patrick Wilcken, Literary Review
“In part the biography of [an] unjustly forgotten figure. Hecht hails da Cunha as a frustrated literary and scientific genius who was actively involved in Brazil’s political transitions before being gunned down in 1909, at age 43, by his wife’s young lover. . . . Hecht places da Cunha’s quirky personal tale inside the more ambitious story of a country at the crossroads, freed from colonialism and monarchy, ready-fractured in class and ethnic terms, and coming into existence as a republic within the global commodity economy that had always shaped it.”
— Lorna Scott Fox, The Nation
“Hecht seamlessly integrates generous portions . . . of da Cunha’s writings into his riveting narrative. Both authors are acutely aware of the costs, to humans and nature alike, of incorporating Amazonia into wider political economies. While da Cunha should not remain a minor figure outside Brazil, Hecht is a major interpreter of Amazonian and environmental history. . . . Essential.”
— T. P. Johnson, Choice
“Hecht distills major historiographic lines of inquiry spanning precolonial to contemporary Latin America: from the sociocultural history of quilombos and the economic legacies of plantation complexes, to the development of geography and the biological sciences as disciplines nurtured by expansionist state ideologies, to the political and military contingencies of late Imperial and early Republican Brazil. Likening the transnational circuits of capital relying on extractive enterprises in the Amazon to the contemporaneous European ‘Scramble for Africa,’ Hecht evokes the interplay of socio-ecological landscapes from the perspective of an exceptionally capable participant-observer.”
— Gabriel de Avilez Rocha, Terrae Incognitae
“Hecht launches this feast of a book with a moving account of the Canudos rebellion. . . . Monumental. . . . Compelling and elegantly written. The author’s deep knowledge of the Amazon and its history bursts from every page with the exuberance of a tropical rainforest. The Scramble for the Amazon is a revelation of a period, region, and cast of characters unknown to many readers. It will long remain the definitive account of this episode of South American history.”
— John Hemming, Times Literary Supplement
“This is a tour de force that defies characterization; an exciting combination of geographical history and literary biography for sure. Its animating spirit, though, is intellectual history. Written from the perspective of a lifetime’s work in the region, and in clear and engaging prose, it is a major contribution to the understanding of the Amazon and its place in the wider continent.”
— Imago Mundi: The International Journal for the History of Cartography
Melville Award Winner for Best Environmental History for Latin America
— American history Association