Author: | Ronald Costello | ISBN: | 9780988654983 |
Publisher: | Gold Sun Publishing | Publication: | April 11, 2018 |
Imprint: | Gold Sun Publishing | Language: | English |
Author: | Ronald Costello |
ISBN: | 9780988654983 |
Publisher: | Gold Sun Publishing |
Publication: | April 11, 2018 |
Imprint: | Gold Sun Publishing |
Language: | English |
The novel, Darkness They Could Not See, is about Christopher Columbus’s first voyage to the “West Indies.” It is historical fiction in epic proportions. Arguably, there is no greater controversy in history than Christopher Columbus.
Looking back 526 plus years, the opinions are many. Some say he was a murderer and rapist. Others say he was a bold and brilliant seaman, perhaps the best of his day, and that he paved the way to sail west. Many — especially the descendants of the indigenous people of the Caribbean — say that he became a genocidal oppressor who destroyed an entire population of Taínos.
His defenders point out that he was merely doing the business of the time, and no guiltier than the slave owners Jefferson or Washington. Still others say he never set foot in North America and besides, he wasn’t the first to explore the Western Hemisphere.
* Darkness They Could Not See* confronts these issues head on. It wasn’t an easy topic to broach. Google Christopher Columbus and over 44 million results pop up. A YouTube search will result in nearly 400,000 videos and hundreds of Columbus books are available on Amazon.
So what makes this one different?
Darkness They Could Not See doesn’t lecture. Instead, it puts its readers into the story, and suddenly the history comes alive. In Darkness, the teachers are the characters telling the story.
What makes this book different is this: the author takes ‘what happened’ and builds it into a story — a story that shines a spotlight on history. A story you will long remember.
The novel, Darkness They Could Not See, is about Christopher Columbus’s first voyage to the “West Indies.” It is historical fiction in epic proportions. Arguably, there is no greater controversy in history than Christopher Columbus.
Looking back 526 plus years, the opinions are many. Some say he was a murderer and rapist. Others say he was a bold and brilliant seaman, perhaps the best of his day, and that he paved the way to sail west. Many — especially the descendants of the indigenous people of the Caribbean — say that he became a genocidal oppressor who destroyed an entire population of Taínos.
His defenders point out that he was merely doing the business of the time, and no guiltier than the slave owners Jefferson or Washington. Still others say he never set foot in North America and besides, he wasn’t the first to explore the Western Hemisphere.
* Darkness They Could Not See* confronts these issues head on. It wasn’t an easy topic to broach. Google Christopher Columbus and over 44 million results pop up. A YouTube search will result in nearly 400,000 videos and hundreds of Columbus books are available on Amazon.
So what makes this one different?
Darkness They Could Not See doesn’t lecture. Instead, it puts its readers into the story, and suddenly the history comes alive. In Darkness, the teachers are the characters telling the story.
What makes this book different is this: the author takes ‘what happened’ and builds it into a story — a story that shines a spotlight on history. A story you will long remember.