Friday 31 July 2020

BOOK REPORT: THE GOLD EATERS BY RONALD WRIGHT

Ronald Wright



Ronald Wright’s 2015 novel, The Gold Eaters, is an epic tale of a civilization confronted with inevitable change wrought by a foreign power. It is the story of a young Inca boy, Wayman (his name means "hawk” in the Quechua language), born in a small fishing village along the Peruvian coast who, in 1527, is kidnapped by Spanish sailors led by Francisco Pizarro and eventually taken to Spain. He lives some years with his captors, who are soldiers of fortune seeking royal assent to return to Peru and conquer the Inca Empire. Eventually Pizarro is given funding from the king and returns with Wayman, who will be his official interpreter. Wright then details the next two decades, as Spanish forces and Pizarro’s band of rough-cut mercenaries gradually wrest the lands and wealth from the native peoples.
Wayman provides the reader with a fascinating glimpse of power struggles within the Spanish ranks, as well as those of Incan royalty. He helps us understand the native culture—its heritage, traditions, and beliefs; how people lived their lives and what mattered to them. Previously, I had little understanding of Incas, and had the standard, bare-bones history of "The Conquest" that we all know. Wright gives us insight into how the Inca Empire functioned and where its strengths and weaknesses lay. In his introduction, he says:

Far to the south, beyond the jungle, where the trees gave way to dunes and snow-capped mountains, lay the realm of the Incas. Running more than three thousand miles from southern Colombia to central Chile and western Argentina, the Inca Empire was then the second largest on Earth (after China) and the last great civilization unknown to the outside world.
In 1526, Francisco Pizarro, a founder and mayor of Panama, formed a company to find and conquer this golden land. (xiii)     

One of the reasons the Incas were vulnerable to the small Spanish forces was because Atawallpa, the last Incan ruler, was in the midst of a dynastic struggle, with competing elites vying for his throne. Of course, the host of “conquistadors” also brought with them European diseases, especially small pox, which killed over three-quarters of the native population. Wright describes how villages and towns up and down the empire had been ravaged by the disease. Wayman himself barely survives after contracting small pox in Spain, leaving his faced “pocked”, as were so many in his land.  
Disease and civil war left the Incas weakened and unprepared for the foreign invaders, but it was by no means a sure bet that Pizarro would succeed—his own small band of marauders was disorderly, ill-equipped and poorly supplied. Having guns and horses certainly aided the Spanish, but their advanced military technology by no means was the only factor in Atawallpa's defeat. Ruthless determination and a mad obsession to acquire gold at any cost (one member of Atawallpa’s court asked Wayman if the foreigners ate gold), and a good deal of luck made their desperate gamble pay off. During his first meeting with the Incan ruler in the capital Cusco, Pizarro observes his fellow countrymen:

“On battered helmets and rusting mail, on ragged clothes—half Spanish, half Peruvian—on the footwear of man and horse worn down by granite roads. On the crazed, truculent eyes that meet his stare. What a band of rogues! They may not frighten Atawallpa, but at times, by Christ, they frighten him.” (189)

After several years, Pizarro and waves of other Spanish eventually took control of the northern half of the empire, while the southern half stood in rebellion for some decades. And we see all this through the eyes of Wayman, kept prisoner by his Spanish overlords as he grows into manhood, his only desire to be reunited with his family and to find his childhood love, Tika.

Wright’s portrayal of the brutal and thuggish behaviour of the Spanish as they took from the Incas all they had is difficult to read. His book is a corrective for the ‘air-brushed’ images we have of Spanish conquistadors, and the shine quickly comes off their gleaming armour as it becomes tarnished in the mud and blood of Peru. The Inca Empire seemed a remarkably peaceful, organized and civil society, with its wealth distributed equitably and having few instances of poverty or need. As well, its native ethos or religiosity seemed in contrast to the contemporary civilization to the north, the Aztecs. In Wright’s description, the Incas have a life-affirming world view, with the sun as their principal deity. I’ve often felt the Aztecs had a more ‘death-oriented’ culture (notably involving human sacrifice) and a world view more akin to the ancient Egyptians. This contrast  is exemplified, for example, in how Incas gently greet the "four corners" of the sky  each day. (Though, there is a scene with Atawallpa caressing the mummified head of a rival war-lord, while he contemplates making the skin of another rival into a table-top! So there’s that.)
How Wayman’s personal life story concludes and the status of the Incan Empire after two decades of invasion leaves the reader satisfied with the former and saddened, and sickened, by the latter. 

One wonders what kind of society would have grown in the Peruvian highlands had the Spanish never arrived. Arguably, it would have been better than the one that took its place. 
A good, fun read!

Cheers, Jake.






Ronald Wright, The Gold Eaters. Penguin Canada Books Inc., Toronto, 2015.

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