quinta-feira, 4 de dezembro de 2008

The Boy and the Warrior


THE BOY AND THE WARRIOR – apresentação (tradução livre) - Bento, menino escravo, acompanha o escravista Caiara, seu dono cruel, nas montanhas da Serra da Mantiqueira, e assusta-se com seu desaparecimento sobrenatural. Sozinho, rezando para São Benedito e a Virgem Maria, encontra o caminho de volta à fazenda. Noemia, esposa do Caiara, liberta todos os escravos, dando-lhes a oportunidade de trabalhar como meeiros. Bento ajuda a criar uma comunidade cooperativa. Passados dois anos, encontra o grande rei Zumbi numa visão. Zumbi o convida a voltar duzentos anos no tempo para Palmares. Trabalho, estudo, sofrimento e aventura preparam o garoto para a vida no tempo passado. Vive e cresce em sabedoria durante dois anos entre os antigos. Este livro é uma historia de heroísmo, inspirada no prospero quilombo de Palmares antes de sua sangrenta destruição por um exercito mercenário. O protagonista Bento abre uma janela no tempo para testemunhar os feitos gloriosos dos escravos fugitivos, construtores do reinado que durou cem anos, abrindo uma nova visão de coragem e esperança.


terça-feira, 2 de setembro de 2008

Fotos Joanopolis


Lake formed to supply water to the capital city, São Paulo. It's one of seven reservatories, each a little lower than the other, linked by tunnels.

Fotos Joanopolis


This mountain is known as "The Sleeping Giant".Can you see his head (over to the right), shoulder and feet? It's part of a fantastic mountain range.





















sábado, 9 de agosto de 2008

New blog


I live in Brazil, in a tourist town called Joanopolis. One of my aims is to make the town, set among mountains, known to those who see Brazil only as beaches and Carnivals. American and Canadian friends become ecstatic when they drive past green hills and waterfalls.



Another aim is to post snippets of a biography of my American grandmother, Mary Emerson.
How many Americans know that after the Civil War hundreds of southerners fled to Brazil as a haven, following the destruction of their means of survival in the devastated south? Mary Emerson was one of those and I'm one of very few who knew personally the original settlers.
They were an enterprising lot, and made their mark here. I hope to tell people all over the world about their contribution to Brazil.

While I work on this project, I have news to report. My first book, that gives me courage to write the second, was published by e-Press Online. The name is "The Boy and the Warrior". It's fiction, but based on Brazilian history and legend, the result of years of study of folklore and the true, extraordinary story of a refuge carved out of the jungle ins northern Brazil by runaway slaves. This refuge, known as Palmares, lasted a hundred years and it's last murdered king is now a cult figure not only among blacks but among young Brazilians in general.

Should you find my blog among so many, please write. I look forward to comments.

Julia Macdonell