Crucible
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- Pedido anticipado
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- Se espera: 20 ene 2026
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- $299.00
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- Pedido anticipado
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- $299.00
Descripción editorial
From the Oscar-nominated filmmaker comes a complex and sweeping historical novel about Henry Ford — the Elon Musk of his day — and his attempt to rule not only an automotive empire but the rambunctious city of Detroit. It is an epic tale ranging from the 1920s through the second World War, featuring violent labor disputes, misbegotten jungle expeditions, a tragic race riot, and the gestapo tactics of Ford’s private army . . .
Already the gateway for illegal Canadian liquor during Prohibition, the Motor City becomes a crucible for American class conflict during the Great Depression, with an army of laid off Ford workers drifting into the ranks of the burgeoning union movement — Henry Ford's worst nightmare. To keep the hundreds of thousands still employed by him in thrall, the man who was formerly 'America's favorite tycoon' recruits black laborers migrating from the deep South to serve as 'strike insurance', and gives Harry Bennett, pugnacious as he is diminutive, free reign over the legion of barroom brawlers and ex-cons who make up the company’s 'Security Department'.
The Model T mogul has also bought a sizable chunk of Brazil's Amazonian rainforest, vowing to grow his own rubber for tires, but stubbornly refusing to include a botanist in his troop of would-be jungle tamers. As a series of biological plagues descend on the Fordlandia plantation, the racial melting pot he has created in Detroit begins to boil over, and not even the Sage of Dearborn can control the forces that have been unleashed.
The novel's cast — Ford workers black and white and their families, young radicals, cynical newsmen, gangsters, Brazilian rubber tappers, cameos from boxer Joe Louis and muralist Diego Rivera — create the tapestry of differing points of view that John Sayles has become famous for, the events portrayed fundamental to the country we live in today.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Filmmaker and novelist Sayles (To Save the Man) brings the lives of Brazilian and American workers into focus in this sprawling panorama of the Ford Motor Company between the 1920s and '40s. On the eve of the Great Depression, Henry Ford launches a scheme to grow his own rubber on a massive plantation in the Brazilian rainforest called Fordlandia. A local rubber tapper named João is hired to work in Fordlandia, where he and his family encounter an American family whose father, Jim, has been sent by the company to manage the clearing of the land. As work on the plantation gets underway, blight attacks the rubber trees, workers revolt, and João's son, Flavio, begins a forbidden romance with Jim's daughter, Kerry. Meanwhile, in Michigan, a multiethnic group of workers struggles against the indignities of life in the Ford factories, culminating in an explosive wildcat strike at the Rouge, Ford's main production complex. The narrative contains a profusion of subplots, including Prohibition-era bootlegging and Diego Rivera's mural-making at the Detroit Institute of Arts. Despite some heavy-handed political messaging, Sayles offers a propulsive view into the era's rapacious capitalism and rapid social changes. This textured tale will resonate with readers concerned about workers' rights and corporate greed.