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Hardcover ISBN: 0-8027-1368-8 Price: $26.00 256 pages Size: 5 5/8 x 9 1/8 November 2001
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U.S. Rights: Walker & Company
All Other Rights: TRANSLATION RIGHTS: CARLISLE & COMPANY
24 E 64th Street, New York, NY 10021
Tel: 212-813-1881 Fax: 212-813-9567
Rights Sold: UK, Fourth Estate; Canada, Penguin; France, Actes Sud; Germany, Diana Verlag; Holland, Gottmer; Italy, Bompiani Japan, Hayakawa; Turkey, Oglak
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Diamond
A Journey to the Heart of an Obsession
Matthew Hart
On a hot morning in May 1999, three Brazilian garimpeiros
(small-scale miners) found a large pink diamond in the muddy
waters of the Abaete River, a discovery that captivated the
diamond trade. Beginning with this dramatic and revealing
story, Matthew Hart takes readers on a journey far beyond the
window at Tiffany's, into an obsessive, largely hidden, and
utterly fascinating world.
From the fog-bound smugglers' paradise of Africa's Diamond Coast
to the Manhattan offices of one of the world's most flamboyant
diamantaires; from the London salesrooms of De Beers,
which manages the longest-running cartel in modern business
history, to a truck-parts shop fronting a diamond brokerage in
Brazil, Matthew Hart has followed the diamond trail,
encountering characters as memorable as the stones they seek.
He recreates the modern history of diamonds, starting in 1869
when a native boy in South Africa found a large crystal on a
farm, sparking a rush that brought Cecil Rhodes and Ernest
Oppenheimer their glory. He chronicles the sensational diamond
strike in the 1990s in Canada's Northwest Territories that has
shaken the fortress of the old cartel, and profiles the
audacious young female geologist Eira Thomas who, against all
odds, discovered near the Arctic Circle one of the richest
diamond fields in the world. He watches one of the finest
diamond cutters operating on a priceless stone and portrays the
lives of the countless, nameless cutters in India who have
transformed the industry by making valuable the tiny stones that
were once considered worthless.
Diamonds also have their dark side. "Malfeasance rustles
in the background of the diamond world like a snake in dry
grass," writes Hart as he documents the relentless and
ingenious thievery that pervades the business and the even more
damaging revelations of "war diamonds" financing
brutal conflicts in Africa. The diamond world is at a
crossroads, he notes, and "who will rule diamonds now and
what form the once-secretive business will take are the issues
of the day."
In the end, it is the stone itself that fascinates and bewitches
the reader. Diamonds are accidents of nature, carbon crystals
compressed deep underground millions of years ago; parts of them
may even predate the Earth itself. And they are elusive,
carried to the surface only in slender volcanoes known as
"pipes," most of which are actually barren. Matthew Hart
has captured the essence of an exotic substance and its world as
surely as a diamond captures light: bending it, reflecting it,
and returning it in a blaze of color.
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