The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion

Cover of The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion by Gregory McNamee
Year: 2003
Language: en
Edition: Reprint
Pages: 337
ISBN-13: 9780826329844
Dimensions:
Height: 8.25 Inches
Length: 5.5 Inches
Weight: 0.93916923612 Pounds
Width: 0.81 Inches
Dewey Decimal: 910/.02154
Editorial overview Touché

The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion by Gregory McNamee is a reprint edition published by the University of New Mexico Press on February 17, 2003. This anthology, originally released in 1995, presents a diverse collection of writings that explore the theme of deserts through various genres. It features contributions from poets and authors across time and cultures, including ancient Chinese poetry, Egyptian inscriptions, and works by notable figures such as Herodotus, Marco Polo, and Edgar Allan Poe.

Readers will find a rich tapestry of narratives that delve into the relationship between humanity and the desert landscape. The anthology includes accounts of survival, cultural lore, and reflections on the limits of civilization, showcasing how deserts have shaped human experience and imagination. With 337 pages of literary exploration, this edition invites readers to engage with the multifaceted representations of deserts, highlighting their enduring significance in literature and society.


Official synopsis Publisher

First published in 1995 as The Sierra Club Desert Reader, this wide-ranging anthology is now published only by UNM Press. Represented in this global selection are poets from ancient China (translated by Ezra Pound), Egyptian inscriptions, the logs of Captain Cook, and the chilling fantasies of Edgar Allan Poe, as well as the lore of native peoples from around the world. Also included are writings from many genres by, among others, Herodotus, Marco Polo, Shelley, Twain, Saint-Exup�ry, T. E. Lawrence, Chatwin, and Borges.
�An extraordinary and ambitious anthology. . . . In selection after selection, deserts serve to define the limits of humankind�the place where civilization ends and the real wild begins. Indeed three of the book�s most poignant sections�a Nazi solder�s account of his struggles for survival in the wastelands of Africa during World War II, Andrei Platonov�s short story about a disastrous forced relocation of Turkmeni tribespeople during the Stalin era, and Robert Scott�s final journal entries about Britain�s tragic 1911 Antarctic expedition�illustrate that not even the great empires can conquer the desert. . . . As this fine anthology makes clear, the desert will always have a place in human society, swirling through our imaginations like a fierce, fiery sirocco.��Outside Magazine
�A marvelous grab bag of short stories, folk tales, poems, songs and travelogues. . . . a joy to thumb through.��Los Angeles Times

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This page includes the available description and bibliographic details for “The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion” by Gregory McNamee. Synopsis preview: First published in 1995 as The Sierra Club Desert Reader, this wide-ranging anthology is now published only by UNM Press. Represented in this global selection are poets from ancient China (translated by Ezra Pound), Egyp…
Who is the author of “The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion”?
“The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion” is credited to Gregory McNamee.
When was “The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion” published?
Publisher: University of New Mexico Press. Year: 2003.
What is the ISBN for “The Desert Reader: A Literary Companion”?
ISBN-13: 9780826329844.
What are the book details (language, pages, edition)?
Language: en. Pages: 337. Edition: Reprint.

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