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E-raamat: Zarate

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The protagonist of the novel Zárate, Santos Zárate was a historical figure. A Venezuelan highwayman with a stronghold in the forest of Güere, he terrorized the valleys of Aragua for some twelve years. The action of the novel takes place in 1825, a few years after Venezuela had sealed its independence from Spain by defeating the Spanish forces at the Battle of Carabobo (June 24, 1821). At this time, General Francisco José de Paula Santander was vice president of the Gran Colombia, the conglomerate of Colombia and Venezuela that had fought Spain for its freedom. General José Antonio Páez governed the Venezuelan region, with his headquarters in Valencia. The entire nation readied itself to confront the great scourge of the timesthe terrible and feared marauders that sowed apprehension and terror among the residents of the valleys of Aragua.



There is in the novel the exaltation of an elite agrarian way of life, idyllic, edenic, that contrasts vividly with the violence of life in the llanos and, especially, with the activities of the highwaymen. Moreover, there is a delicate love story that develops pari passu with the official activities of the main protagonists. The development of the female characters may seem a bit quaint for todays tastes, though they are beautiful and carefully drawn. An irrepressible humor, at times subtle, pervades the entire novel.
Translator's Note ix
Part I
Chapter 1 The March
3(4)
Chapter 2 The Travelers
7(4)
Chapter 3 A Good Cure for Nostalgia
11(8)
Chapter 4 How Appearances Deceive
19(4)
Chapter 5 The Prisoner
23(8)
Chapter 6 Resurrected
31(6)
Chapter 7 Doctor Sandalio Bustillon
37(8)
Chapter 8 A Look Backward
45(10)
Chapter 9 My Kingdom for a Horse
55(10)
Chapter 10 Hacienda "El Torreon"
65(6)
Chapter 11 On the Shores of the Lake
71(8)
Chapter 12 Don Carlos's Guest
79(6)
Chapter 13 The Lion in a Sheep's Skin
85(10)
Chapter 14 A Bad Memory Detracting from a Thankless Impression
95(4)
Chapter 15 Do Good, Think Not to Whom
99(16)
Chapter 16 Idyll through a Trellis
115(6)
Chapter 17 Other Types from Our Old Times
121(8)
Chapter 18 Roaring Jealousies and Expanding Hearts
129(12)
Part II
Chapter 1 White Wings at the Bottom of a Cave
141(12)
Chapter 2 Old Worries
153(6)
Chapter 3 Sybil and Mother
159(14)
Chapter 4 Preposterous Projects and One More Illusion Dispelled
173(8)
Chapter 5 Turn Three Times and You'll Find It
181(10)
Chapter 6 Metamorphosis
191(8)
Chapter 7 The Brush's Kiss
199(6)
Chapter 8 A Seasonable Advice
205(8)
Chapter 9 Grains of Sand that Will Turn to Mountains
213(6)
Chapter 10 The Feast
219(12)
Chapter 11 The Nightmare of Romerales
231(10)
Chapter 12 A Graphic Response
241(6)
Chapter 13 Privilege of Windows that Open on to Orchards
247(8)
Chapter 14 Prerogatives of Orchards on Which Some Windows Look
255(8)
Chapter 15 The Great Man Hunt
263(6)
Chapter 16 The Jaguar and the Dogs
269(4)
Chapter 17 An Abyss
273(6)
Chapter 18 A Hand for a Head
279(8)
Chapter 19 A Feeble Light to Brighten Dreadful Dark
287(8)
Chapter 20 Daring Dazzling Valor
295(6)
Chapter 21 The Wedding
301(8)
Chapter 22 A Demon Turned to Archangel
309(4)
Chapter 23 God's Justice
313(4)
Epilogue 317
Ignacio L. Götz holds a Ph.D. from New York University. He taught philosophy and comparative religion at Hofstra University for 35 years, where he held the Lawrence Stessin Distinguished Professor Chair. He has published some 20 books, among them Faith, Humor, and Paradox; Manners and Violence; Jesus the Jew (2nd edition); Conceptions of Happiness (2nd edition); The Unknowable God; and Venezuela Heroica (Peter Lang).