ExtraTorrent.com - The Largest Bittorent System Login    |    Register
ExtraTorrent.com
Very useful sites
ExtraTorrent.com

ExtraTorrent.com
HOT Torrents view all >
ExtraTorrent.com
Hot torrents
First Cams
View Torrent Info: Ice.Age.Dawn.of.the.Dinosaurs.TS.XviD-Fatal
View Torrent Info: Ice Age 3 Xvid CAM ENG - F4U
View Torrent Info: Imagine.That.TELESYNC.XviD 2009 www.FilmulMeu.tk By Crow21
View Torrent Info: Transformers Revenge Of The Fallen TS XviD-FLAWL3SS
View Torrent Info: Skeleton Crew (2009) DvdRip Xvid {1337x}-Noir
View Torrent Info: Moving McAllister LIMITED DVDRip XviD-SAPHiRE
View Torrent Info: Van Wilder Freshman Year.2009.DvdRip.UR.Xvid {1337x}-Noir
View Torrent Info: The Fifth Commandment (2008) DvdRip Xvid {1337x}-Noir
Hot torrents
BluRays
View Torrent Info: Corpse Bride 2005 BDRip H264 5.1 ch-SecretMyth (Kingdom-Release)
View Torrent Info: Dolans Cadillac 2009 BRRip ResourceRG H264
View Torrent Info: The Walker 2007 BRRip ResourceRG H264
View Torrent Info: Austin Powers Trilogy BDRip-ResourceRG

ExtraTorrent.com
Chat
30s
ExtraTorrent.com
To add new messages please Login or Register for FREE

virtual girl
Direct Download


ExtraTorrent.com > Categories > Books torrents > Audio books torrents


WintoolsPro


Browse Books torrents

Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrent


* How to detect SPAM or FAKE? Before download this torrent read suggestions about spam or fake detection on our forum.
Download torrent:Download Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrentSearch for Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrentBookmark Torrent: Marco Polo - From Venice to XanaduSend Torrent: Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrent
Alternative download:This download might also be available on DirectDownload (highspeed access 16 mbit), on Rapidshare
Bookmark:Bookmark and Share
Info hash:132936f1fe766240a627da9c71b55f01de9a4dbd
Category:Categories > Books torrents > Audio books torrents
Trackers:
2   View all torrent trackers >
Seeds:---Update seeds and leechers stat
Leechers:---
Health:Torrent health: 0
Total Size:583.55 MB
Number of files:
16   View torrent files >
Torrent added:2008-08-25 12:36:41
ExtraTorrent.comRatingExtraTorrent.com
Torrent rating: no ratingno rating

Download Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrentDownload from UseNeXT




Torrent Description
General Information
===================
Title............: Marco Polo: From Venice to Xanadu
Author...........: Laurence Bergreen
Read By..........: Paul Boehmer
Genre............: Biography
Publisher........: Books on Tape; Unabridged Edition (2007)
Language.........: English

Original Media Information
==========================
Media............: 13 CDs
Condition........: Very Good

File Information
================
Number of MP3s...: 13
Total Duration...: 16 hours 29 minutes
Total MP3 Size...: 582 MB
Ripped by........: deandominic
Ripper...........: Exact Audio Copy
Encoder..........: LAME 3.98
Encoder Settings.: ABR 80 kbit/s 44100 Hz Mono
ID3 Tags.........: v1.1, v2.3 (includes embedded album art)

Book Description
================

http://www.laurencebergreen.com/marco.html

NY Times Book Review:

Here’s a lesson in the graceful acceptance of defeat. In 1298, the Genoese navy bested the Venetian fleet at the Battle of Curzola. Unable to live with the disgrace, one Venetian commander, Andrea Dandolo, killed himself by beating his head against his ship’s mast. Another Venetian leader, Marco Polo, surrendered calmly, was taken prisoner and spent a few years writing his memoirs in comfortable captivity. Dandolo’s fame died on the deck; Polo’s will outlive our grandchildren. Few famous names have as much vagueness attached to their exploits, though. Marco Polo opened Asia to European trade, so we’re told, but we generally don’t know much else. Laurence Bergreen remedies that by bolstering Polo’s reputation and arguing for his historical importance in a book as enthralling as a rollicking travel journal. Bergreen, who has written biographies of Louis Armstrong, James Agee and Irving Berlin, turned his attention to ancient explorers with “Over the Edge of the World,” which tracked Ferdinand Magellan’s circumnavigation of the globe. I was a fan of that book, but “Marco Polo” far outshines it, and not surprisingly. Marco Polo, unlike Magellan, left his biographers a masterpiece of a memoir to work with.

Marco Polo wasn’t the first European to venture into what we now know as China; he wasn’t even the first Polo. In 1253, Marco’s father, Niccolò, and uncle Maffeo set off on a trading journey to the heart of the Mongol empire established by Genghis Khan. To their contemporaries, this was madness. Genghis Khan had established his kingdom by leading expert warriors, 100,000 strong, on campaigns marked by extreme brutality. Word got around. In Europe, Bergreen writes, “the Mongols were considered Satan’s spawn, among the most lawless, violent and sinful people on the face of the earth.”

The Polo brothers knew something their peers didn’t: Genghis Khan and his successors were pitiless warriors, but they were just as fierce about keeping the post-conquest peace. Sensing a chance for profit in the Pax Mongolica imposed across Asia, the Polo brothers journeyed to the court of Genghis’s grandson and imperial heir, Kublai Khan. The man they met bore no resemblance to his reputation. Kublai Khan welcomed foreign traders and exhibited a rare tolerance and interest in all religions, including Christianity.

Sixteen years later — business trips were a stretch back then — Niccolò Polo returned to Venice to find that his wife, now dead, had given birth to a son 15 years earlier.

In 1271, Niccolò and Maffeo took Marco with them on another journey to the court of the great Khan. Marco hit it off so well with the emperor that he stayed with the Mongol ruler for the next 17 years, earning his keep as a tax assessor and trusted adviser. Acting as Kublai Khan’s eyes and ears, Marco roamed Asia and Africa and reported back to the emperor on the people and taxable commerce he encountered. Shortly before Kublai Khan’s death in 1294, Marco returned to Venice, assumed his place as a prominent merchant, fought the Genoese at Curzola and eventually wrote his famous memoir.

He should have been forgotten by history. The merchant Benjamin of Tudela and the Franciscan missionaries Giovanni da Pian del Carpini and William of Rubruck beat him to market with manuscripts about their travels in the exotic land. But Marco Polo, Bergreen points out, had two advantages rival authors lacked: he took great notes and had a terrific ghostwriter.

On his return journey to Venice, Marco Polo carted back years’ worth of journals and reports. While a captive of the Genoese, he sent for those notes (nobility had its privileges even in a prison) and used them to jog his memory. Also prodding him was his co-author, Rustichello of Pisa, a fellow prisoner and experienced writer of popular romances. Rustichello knew how to play up the drama, and in Marco Polo he found a rare subject. “Without the stubborn Pisan to force the Venetian wayfarer to sit still long enough to dictate his overflowing reminiscences,” Bergreen notes, “the story of Marco’s travels would never have been written.”

What the two came up with was nothing short of a blockbuster. Marco Polo’s “Travels” spilled over with sex, violence, suspense, exotic lands, strange people and bizarre practices. Mongol horsemen thundered out of its pages. Marco dazzled readers with descriptions of the singing sands of the Desert of Lop and a firsthand account of the metropolis of Quinsai, now known as Hangzhou, the most advanced and prosperous city in the world. Marco recounted the cutthroat politics of Kublai Khan’s court in all its delicious drama, complete with power-mad counselors, back-stabbing colleagues and grisly executions.

Temptations of the flesh abounded. Marco was forever stumbling into the 13th-century version of the farmer’s daughter joke. Time and again the delighted young man — remember, he was teenager when he set out from Venice — found villagers lined up outside his tent offering their nubile daughters for his pleasure and their honor. His description of Kublai Khan’s sexual talent search, with scouts scouring the provinces to send the best of the best to the emperor’s bedchamber, reads like a fable spun by Scheherazade.

Lest readers think his journey was one big Tom Jonesian romp, Marco included the dark side, too. He had to elude marauders, survive shipwrecks and cross treacherous deserts. Anxiety, loneliness and thirst were constant companions. In Myanmar, he survived a night among villagers who regularly murdered noble visitors to trap their souls and bring good fortune to the house. Poor Marco. As he rode into each new town, he didn’t know whether he was checking into the Playboy mansion or the Bates Motel.

The world he encountered was stranger than any fable he’d been told in Venice. “Wherever he roamed,” Bergreen writes, “Marco Polo found examples of the natural order of things overturned: astrologers conjuring up tempests at will; salt employed as money; householders inviting strangers to lie with their wives, sisters and daughters; deadly serpents yielding life-saving medicine — a dizzying succession of curiosities and paradoxes.”

Curiously, the figure who makes the greatest impression in Bergreen’s biography isn’t Marco Polo but his patron, Kublai Khan. Marco was many things: master capitalist, ancient journalist, all-time champion traveler. As a person, though, he’s a bit thin and empty. He’s more of an Everyman watching amazing events unfold.

Kublai Khan, by contrast, comes off as both a giant of history and a man of flesh and blood. His excesses were legendary, of course — Samuel Taylor Coleridge immortalized his summer palace, Xanadu — but the emperor doesn’t deserve the Caligula rap. His religious tolerance and encouragement of international trade marked him as a ruler with wisdom that put him centuries before his time. Marco describes Khan as a bold, politically deft administrator who knew how to play territories and factions off one another to keep the kingdom’s peace. The emperor used paper money, unheard of in Europe, to unify the empire’s economy. “Marco revealed Kublai Khan’s splendid realm not as a static, remote fantasyland populated by savages,” Bergreen writes, “but as a vital state constantly on the alert for danger — an empire that never slept, where swift messengers moved by night if necessary, their way marked by reassuring rows of trees and lit by flickering torchlight.”

In the end, Marco Polo’s greatest contribution to history was to deliver this simple news to Europe: The Asians, they’re not so bad. They’re kind of like us. In some ways, they’re better.

Download Marco Polo - From Venice to Xanadu torrentDownload from UseNeXT


Comments (please add your comment)
No comments


Recent Searches

handjob     Teen Tryouts     avalon+ cant live a day     cascada evacuate the dancefloo     viol prison xxx     harry potter     terminator 4     parkway drive     transformers 2 french     KILMA QUEEN OF THE AMAZON     Rachel RoXXX     Girl Girl Studio     dictionary ebooks     dvd     bullfrog games     hangover     christine young     windows 7 crack     adult     milk     terminator     孕かの     nds french     black book     keyjen for nero 8     le seigneur des anneaux french     porn     Pregnant     makai     ABBY WINTERS     Fundamentals Of Digital Logic      keygen for nero 8     karas french     Spartan     rape     being there     666     70-285     Samantha 38G     anime     Lesbian     black women     sex     ABBY WINTERS ELIZABETH     haus     crank     day with a pornstar     dvd5 ita     hindi     movie     lara adrian     software     vanessa blue     The Strip show of Her Life     music     gangbang     being there ru     The Hangover     

Direct Download


Home - Browse Torrents - Upload Torrent - Stat - Forum - Blog - FAQ - Login
ExtraTorrent.com is in compliance with copyrights