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The most helpful favorable review
The most helpful critical review
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best, most sweeping account of the Sahara
This masterful account of the Sahara is hard to surpass. Few books detail the Sahara and when they do they usually take the form of either purely scientific accounts or purely historical accounts. This book is one part history, one part geography, one part travel journal and one part science. The authors detail separate sections on the history of the Sahara, the...
Published on December 4, 2003 by Seth J. Frantzman
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35 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A complete turkey!
It is generally unavoidable to write about history while not having been there, but it is surely indefensible to attempt to describe the geography of a region with virtually no firsthand experience.The authors start off promisingly by dismissing the customary romanticism laid on the Sahara as "outsider thinking": the "pitiless sun" being no more than the "pitiless...
Published on July 17, 2005 by C. Scott
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35 of 39 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
A complete turkey!, July 17, 2005
This review is from: Sahara: The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desert (Paperback)
It is generally unavoidable to write about history while not having been there, but it is surely indefensible to attempt to describe the geography of a region with virtually no firsthand experience.The authors start off promisingly by dismissing the customary romanticism laid on the Sahara as "outsider thinking": the "pitiless sun" being no more than the "pitiless traffic" of Fifth Avenue. Thereafter great empires of West Africa are well accounted for (lifted from a previous book of the authors?) but beyond that, and their visits to Niger and Timbuktu, they get in a complete muddle. The howlers start from page 9 when we learn that the Tanezrouft is an erg and later that In Salah is "an epicentre of the oil industry" and Leptis was dug out of the sand. The nature of the harmattan wind also happens to contradict all previous sources, Ghat is an all but abandoned Tuareg camp and - get this - the canyon of Iherir contains the Sahara's only perennial river! This is a clanger of Saharan proportions but will hopefully bring some income to the poor village of Iherir when the whitewater brigade turn up.The problem is that the authors have been to the Sahara just a couple of times, more than most it is true but surely not enough to attempt a book such as this? One gets the impression they fell for the enigmatic Tuareg (as you do) and thought "heck, let's write our new book about Sahara and those shimmering courtly nomads!" Anyone who would dare take on such a task surely ought to read French and German. Perhaps this is why the authors quote repeatedly from a limited range of the usual English-language sources: Barth, Nachtigal plus Africanus and other ancients and the few Brits like Clapperton that put pen to paper. But they use these 19th century explorers as if they were as reliable as anyone and relevant today - including ancient spellings; have they not even heard of a Mich 741 map? Having done a lot of their groundwork for them fifteen years ago, Porch's excellent 'Conquest of the Sahara' gets a good work out, while Heseltine's 'From Libyan Sands to Chad' (1955 and a great little classic) is the veritable horse's mouth for Chad and the Tubu (so never mind about Jean Chapelle's 'Nomads Noirs du Sahara' then). And last but not least is the Encyclopaedia Britannica (online version...) for all those last minute queries. What a give away. Elsewhere the embellishment is irritating if to be expected - though you would have thought not in the "moonscape" Aïr, one of the few places in the Sahara (apart from Timbuktu) where the authors have actually been. They certainly do not appear to have visited the desert areas of Morocco, Chad, Sudan, Algeria, Tunisia, Mauritania or even Egypt, or have nothing accurate to say about these places.But I liked the section on weather and also got a better understanding of the eminence of Old Ghana in the heyday of the trans-Sahara trade. In the end though, the authors prove that they too are outsiders - overlooking or skimming vast parts of Saharan geography like the Gilf Kebir (and not just the 'Western Desert'), the Tassili and Akakus, the distinctive Moorish culture and the Reguibat and the ongoing Tubu rebellion. They extrapolate from maps whose context they misunderstand: we learn that "dunes cover most of Western Sahara" while long-abandoned Tagheza somehow overrules Taoudenni today as a source of salt. They miss out on contemporary political upheavals too, as if they wrote the book 20 years ago. So it is that comprehending the Tuareg rebellion in Niger, (something which has set the Tuareg back years and was one of Micheal Buckley's better achievements in Grains of Sand) isn't allowed to interfere with eulogies on their preternatural guiding abilities, etc; the same, tired old Tuareg schtick.The trouble with making stuff up or guessing is that, besides making a fool of the authors, the reader does not know what else is fictitious and so the book's value is lost. Like it or not, Europe is the source of the greatest works on the Sahara, either through direct historical connection or learning. The definitive work on the Great Desert will, or may already be, written in French or German. This book certainly is not it.
Chris S
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best, most sweeping account of the Sahara, December 4, 2003
This review is from: Sahara: The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desert (Paperback)
This masterful account of the Sahara is hard to surpass. Few books detail the Sahara and when they do they usually take the form of either purely scientific accounts or purely historical accounts. This book is one part history, one part geography, one part travel journal and one part science. The authors detail separate sections on the history of the Sahara, the peoples of the Sahara, the winds, the water, the geography and the wildlife. A special chapter covers the lifestyle of the Taureg tribesman. Special mention is made of the Islamic slave trade and the salt trade. Maps cover the many tribal groups, the amazing geography made up of Massifs and a map dedicated to the underground aquifers. Many wonderful photographs detail everything from a desert Hilton to the beautiful sand dunes to the people and wildlife of the Sahara. The Sahara is as large as the United States and includes a vast array of cultures and landscapes including the Qattara depression, and has over 2 million inhabitants. A must read for anyone interested in Africa, geography or extreme places.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Makes me want to visit the place!, January 25, 2007
This review is from: Sahara: The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desert (Paperback)
I have never been to the Sahara, or even Africa, and had no intention of doing so until I read this book. Looking at the natural and human history of this area of the world, the book's text is an intersection of the various fields of geology, botany, ecology, geography, history, climatology, and surprisingly, even hydrology. The authors (there are two of them) have written a book that describes this area from North to South, from the Atlantic to the West, to Red Sea in the East. They cover all sorts of topics, from the aquifers that lie below the sand dunes, to describing the insect life above it, to the salt trading paths that criss-crossed these dunes. The book also examines how various human societies have come to live in this desert, sometimes in spite of it. These include native societies such as the Tuareg, Berbers, and more recent ones such as the various Arab nations. The book is written with a slight liberal tilt as one can sense the respect for nature and native societies, and the critique of modern societies. All in all though, it was a very interesting read, and I highly recommend it.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Rather beautiful and inspirational, August 16, 2005
This review is from: Sahara: The Extraordinary History of the World's Largest Desert (Paperback)
I have no way of assessing this as a Saharan Travel Tips Guide, but whatever some reviewers may think, there are other pleasures on offer in travel literature; this is a lovely romantic and glimmering armchair trip to the Sahara of fantasy and mirage, and form some might be preferable to extensive information on appropriate tyre sizes. Not all travel books ask us to travel corporeally. Some ask us to use our imaginations. This is one, and it's rich and satisfying at that level.
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