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Sands Of Death
 
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Sands Of Death (Paperback)

by Michael Asher (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
List Price: CDN$ 18.95
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"Not for the fainthearted, this is still an exceptionally powerful read" GOOD BOOK GUIDE


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In December 1880 a French expedition attempted to map a route for a railway that would stretch from their colony in Algeria right across the Sahara desert to reach their territories in West Africa. 'Paris to Timbuctoo in Six Days' was the slogan. It would do for the French colonies what the American railways were doing in the western states at the same time. No native opposition was expected. As one of the expedition's organizers said, 'A hundred uncivilized tribesmen armed with old-fashioned spears: what is that against the might of France?' Four months later, a handful of emaciated survivors staggered into a remote outpost on the edge of the desert. Although armed with modern rifles, the column had been lured to destruction by the self-styled 'lords of the desert', the Tuareg. At this, the highpoint of European colonialism in Africa, this story of treachery, massacre, torture and even cannibalism made headlines around the world. Attacked by the Tuareg in their remote heartland, the survivors had been pursued for weeks on end, driven into the waterless desert to die. The desperate lengths they resorted to shocked Victorian sensibilities. They do not make easy reading now. This grisly story, told by our greatest living desert explorer reveals what happened when the conceit of western colonialism met the equally arrogant Tuareg, who had dominated this remote region, and anyone trying to cross it, for a thousand years.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining....yes, Sep 17 2009
By Melvin Scott "MJS" (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
The book starts with a Prologue on Gordon Lainge, the ill-fated British explorer who died in 1826 after arriving at Timbuktu. By coincidence, prior to reading this book I had completed The Race For Timbuktu by Frank Kryza. Where Kryza was guarded in details regarding Laing and his ordeal, Asher leaps in with a heavy descriptive narration, that is dependent on poetic license. Right there, the gage for this book was set.

Still, Sands of Death despite, its overdramatic title, was a fast paced, entertaining read, about Paul Flatters French expedition in 1880/81 to map a route for a trans-Saharan railway in what is now Algeria. Much of the description of otherwise mundane activities in the dessert was spiced up by Asher's own experience, which is considerable, and in turn is one of the strengths of the book.

So, although the line between historical and contemporary is blurred, I would still give a recommendation based on three accounts; The first is that it is well written, and never seems to bog down. Secondly, because it gives a glimpse of a historical era and place that is not very well documented. Third, it gives a very vivid description of the Tuareg people, who have long since passed into history themselves and are all but forgotten. That is, unless you have read Kryza's book, which is excellent.

Asher has the reader cheering for the French over the dessert nomads, which in these politically correct times is rather confusing. Given the parties involved, it is hard to say if there should have been a rooting interest for either side.

The final point, Asher ends the book stating that Mariantonietta Peru, a member of the order of the White Fathers mission, that was on the wrong end of two massacres in the book, became the first woman to trek across the Sahara from west to east in 1987. He fails to mention that Ms. Peru is his wife.The Race For Timbuktu
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