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SAHARA UNVEILED: A Journey Across the Desert
by William Langewiesche | Biographies & Memoirs
Registered by wingliteraDivawing of Bremen, Bremen Germany on Sunday, May 15, 2011
Average 9 star rating by BookCrossing Members 

status (set by rapturina): travelling


2 journalers for this copy...

Journal Entry 1 by wingliteraDivawing from Bremen, Bremen Germany on Sunday, May 15, 2011

This book has not been rated.

Dear Reader,

Welcome to BookCrossing, especially if it is your first time here. I am really pleased that you found this book. If you wish you may hold on to it, but I hope that you will pass it on, either to a friend or loved one, or by leaving it to be found again. That way our book will be on an adventurous journey which we can follow as it gets passed along.

In the meantime, did you read the book? What did you think of it? Also, what do you think of the idea of BookCrossing? Feel free to write any thoughts when you come back to make a journal entry for this book.

While you are here, why not take a look around our website? It is completely free to register, it is safe and spam free and, if you do join, you will receive email alerts when this book is found again.

Happy Reading!

literaDiva



description of contents as per book cover:

In our imagination, the desert is a scorching flatland, a palm grove like a shimmering green line floating in the distance, an ocean of dunes. You can close your eyes to see it.

When William Langewiesche set out to document the state of the Sahara desert he was determined to see just what came before his eyes: nothing more or less. The result is an unsentimentalized, often startling account of the desert.

From the southernmost Mediterranean to the Africa Savannah and west to the Atlantic, Langewiesche's trek took him through the hyperarid core of the desert, a terrain that taunts the imagination with its unalterable desolation.

Here cadavers decompose like sun-dried dates, horizons are so barren that stones are mistaken for trucks, distances so empty that misgrating birds have been observed seeking the company of humans. Langewiesche's descriptions of the physical desert are brilliantly matched by his explorations of its psychological landscape: the bitter colonial history, the stoicism of the nomads, the austerity of Islam.

Despite the passing of the camel and the caravan, the Sahara remains without compromise. William Langewiesche blends history and reportage, anthropology and anecdote, into an unforgettable portrait of the unsubdued heart of the Sahara unveiled.



Addendum (01.07.2011):

Book is on tour ...

 


Journal Entry 2 by rapturina at Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland Netherlands on Saturday, July 09, 2011

This book has not been rated.

It's here, thank you so much literaDiva! This looks like it could be a really good read and I hope I will get to it soon. :D 


Journal Entry 3 by rapturina at Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland Netherlands on Sunday, August 14, 2011

9 out of 10

I finished reading this book yesterday, after having started it only a few days ago. It was a very interesting book and I really enjoyed the read. William Langewiesche is a good storyteller, he doesn't talk about himself a lot and doesn't really judge, but lets the people he meet speak for themselves. I was fascinated by his descriptions of the life and people of the African deserts, and now want to go on such a trip myself. :D 


Journal Entry 4 by rapturina at Rotterdam, Zuid-Holland Netherlands on Friday, January 13, 2012

This book has not been rated.

Sending to a friend in Poland! 




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