Conquistador Voices, a two-volume work intended for the general reader, presents the Spanish Conquest of the Americas principally through the voices of those who participated in that historic event. The story is told in five parts, each part featuring a principal actor. In volume I are described the four voyages of Christopher Columbus and the conquest of Mexico żeby Hernán Cortés, some details of which come to us through native accounts. Volume II opens with the voyages to Peru of Francisco Pizarro and his brothers, their seizure of the Inca empire, and the long, bloody, and self-destructive sequel to this Spanish campaign. This is followed żeby an account of the remarkable, years-long sojourn of Álvar Núńez Cabeza de Vaca through the deserts of North America, as well as his subsequent mission to today's Paraguay. The final section of volume II tells the tale of Hernando de Soto's ill-starred expedition to North America, an expedition in which Soto himself lost his life. The sweep of the drama is roughly from 1490 to 1550, with the action moving from the West Indies to Mexico, then to Peru, today's southeastern US, Mexico again, Paraguay, and back to the US--and containing accounts of two desperate escapes aby sea. Somewhat in the manner of a television documentary, the story is told aby the conquistadors themselves or the men who accompanied them in "sound bites," with background and connecting narrative supplied by the author in whatever amount necessary to ensure an engaging and readable tale. Most of the original material is from eyewitness and participant sources, with some material "as told to" a later bronicler. An effort has been made to avoid moralizing on these events, but to report them-with all due filtering of wheat from chaff-as we have been told that they occurred. Nine maps maps accompany the text of Vol I, 8 maps Vol II. An index, copious footnotes, and brief bibliography are included in each volume.