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This book features a young explorer caught in the torments of civil
war. This volume is the first-ever English translation of the
memoirs of Karl Heller, a twenty-year-old aspiring Austrian
botanist who traveled to Mexico in 1845 to collect specimens. He
passed through the Caribbean, lived for a time in the mountains of
Veracruz, and journeyed to Mexico City through the cities of Puebla
and Cholula. After a brief residence in the capital, Heller moved
westward to examine the volcanoes and silver mines near Toluca.
When the United States invaded Mexico in 1846-47 conditions became
chaotic, and the enterprising botanist was forced to flee to
Yucatan. Heller lived in the port city of Campeche, but visited
Merida, the ruins of Uxmal, and the remote southern area of the
Champoton River. From there Heller, traveling by canoe, journeyed
through southern Tabasco and northern Chiapas and finally returned
to Vienna through Cuba and the United States bringing back
thousands of samples of Mexican plants and animals. Heller's
account is one of the few documents we have from travelers who
visited Mexico in this period, and it is particularly useful in
describing conditions outside the capital of Mexico City. In 1853,
Heller published his German-language account as ""Reisen in
Mexiko"", but the work has remained virtually unknown to English or
Spanish readers. This edition now provides a complete, annotated,
and highly readable translation.
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