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Literary Figures - Women's Biography, European Women - Literary Biography, Africa - Travel Essays & Descriptions, French Literary Biography, North Africa - Travel
Prisoner of Dunes by Isabelle Eberhardt β€” book cover

Prisoner of Dunes

by Isabelle Eberhardt, Sharon Bangert (Translator), Sharon Bangert
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Overview

Hitherto unpublished in English, this book describes Eberhardt's wanderings from Marseilles to Tunis and Algeria from 1899 to 1904. She spent much of her short life in North Africa, where she was converted to Islam and learned to speak fluent Arabic. Her eccentric behavior shocked the French colonials. She smoked kif, wore men's clothing, drank alcohol, and was promiscuous with men. She died in a flash-flood at the age of twenty-seven.

Synopsis

Hitherto unpublished in English, this book describes Eberhardt's wanderings from Marseilles to Tunis and Algeria from 1899 to 1904. She spent much of her short life in North Africa, where she was converted to Islam and learned to speak fluent Arabic. Her eccentric behavior shocked the French colonials. She smoked kif, wore men's clothing, drank alcohol, and was promiscuous with men. She died in a flash-flood at the age of twenty-seven.

Publishers Weekly

The Swiss-born Eberhardt (1877-1904) did not relish living like other European women of her time, preferring to ride with and write about nomadic desert tribes in North Africa. She dressed like an Arab man, spoke Arabic fluently, practiced Islam and had numerous lovers, including Slimne Ehnni, the Algerian soldier she later wed. She died young, just 27, in a flash flood. As in In the Shadow of Islam, Prisoner of Dunes offers more desert escapades, as well as brief stories of tribespeople. Eberhardt sheds light on the ways of her usually flexible Arab hosts and generally refrains from criticizing them-there's little here about one disapproving Algerian national who stabbed her in 1901. From the narrative introduction through the cinematic scenes of desert tribes, Eberhardt proves herself a masterfully evocative writer. In her meditation on exile and wandering, she clearly evokes both her own moods and the mood of the region with poetic precision-``Here, in this lost, mislaid place, both grandiose and simple, the noises of our tenacious, useless struggles come to die in the great, immutable silence.'' (Oct.)

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The Swiss-born Eberhardt (1877-1904) did not relish living like other European women of her time, preferring to ride with and write about nomadic desert tribes in North Africa. She dressed like an Arab man, spoke Arabic fluently, practiced Islam and had numerous lovers, including Slimne Ehnni, the Algerian soldier she later wed. She died young, just 27, in a flash flood. As in In the Shadow of Islam, Prisoner of Dunes offers more desert escapades, as well as brief stories of tribespeople. Eberhardt sheds light on the ways of her usually flexible Arab hosts and generally refrains from criticizing them-there's little here about one disapproving Algerian national who stabbed her in 1901. From the narrative introduction through the cinematic scenes of desert tribes, Eberhardt proves herself a masterfully evocative writer. In her meditation on exile and wandering, she clearly evokes both her own moods and the mood of the region with poetic precision-``Here, in this lost, mislaid place, both grandiose and simple, the noises of our tenacious, useless struggles come to die in the great, immutable silence.'' (Oct.)

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1995
Publisher
Owen, Peter Limited
Pages
128
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780720609448

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