Die Brücke im Dschungel

 
 
 
Book cover of "Die Brücke im Dschungel"

Buy a Printed Edition

Die Brücke im Dschungel by B. Traven is a novel written in the early 20th century. Set in the Mexican jungle around a precarious bridge and a pump station, it follows an itinerant narrator and his acquaintance Sleigh among Indigenous villagers as a festive night turns grave when a small boy disappears by the river. The story foregrounds parental love, communal bonds, and the ever-present danger of the wilderness while tracing the uneasy ties between outsiders and locals. The opening of the novel introduces the narrator’s chance meetings with Sleigh, an American who lives among Indigenous people, then shifts to a riverside settlement preparing for a dance. Music fails to arrive, but the village gathers: Garza fiddles, his wife Carmelita tends the family, and their exuberant son Carlos dotes on his older half-brother Manuel, home from Texas. In the thick, moonless night a single splash goes largely unnoticed; when Carlos vanishes, rumors swirl that he rode off, while Carmelita becomes convinced he fell from the unrailed bridge—his new boots betraying him. The community sparks fires along the banks, dives in the murky water, and sweeps the shore with torches in a solemn, collective search, as the scene closes on Manuel heading into the dark. (This is an automatically generated summary.)

Reviews