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Photographer Durou illuminates the world's harshest landscape with breathtaking images, historical illustrations, and contemporary essays.
USA Today
Forbidding, yes, but the world's largest desert also is immensely beautiful. Jean-Marc Durou's photographs focus on the light and texture of this vast region, along with the resilient people who call it home.
Library Journal
Durou, a professional photographer who has written extensively about the Sahara, has captured the essence of both the land and the people in this coffee table-style book. Starting with the 18th century and proceeding to the present day, Durou exportrays the desert through full-color, full-page photographs complemented by comments on the nomads, travel writers, geographers, and an explorers who have crossed its sands. He also provides answers to such age-old questions as the mystery behind the legend of Timbuktu, which was founded by Frenchman Ren -Auguste Cailli . Essays from naturalists Bruno Lamarche and Th odore Monrod evoke strong images and feelings of what life is really like in the Sahara. Fun and quirky, this picture book is recommended for larger libraries.--Stephanie Papa, Baltimore Cty. Circuit Court Lib., MD Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.
Booknews
Short writings by eight authors (some of them Saharan nomads) punctuate what is really a photo book with Durou's huge, color, borderless images, many without descriptive text. Texts include meditations, travelogues, and a cultural history; and photographs are clasps of people (especially Tuaregs), long shots of architecture, and panoramas of sand and mountainscapes. Regarding the frequent separations, absences, and reunions of nomadic life, a Tuareg proverb says that we must "move our tents apart to bring our hearts together." And in reference to the desert demand to look far ahead, another Tuareg proverb aphorizes: "One always travels ahead of oneself." While the cover's subtitle reads , the title page reads . Oversize 12.5x10<">. No index. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)