Timbuctoo

Timbuctoo by Tahir Shah, published by Secretum Mundi Limited on September 5, 2022, is a historical narrative that explores the extraordinary tale of Robert Adams, an illiterate American sailor who was discovered in London in 1815. This edition spans 550 pages and is presented in English. The story unfolds during a time when European powers were vying for empire, centering on the elusive city of Timbuctoo, a place shrouded in myth and obsession, often depicted as a golden metropolis.
Readers will find a richly detailed account of Adams’s journey, which challenges the romanticized notions of Timbuctoo as a land of wealth. Instead, his experiences reveal a stark reality of poverty and hardship. The narrative delves into themes of survival, treachery, and the complexities of human ambition against the backdrop of the British Regency. Inspired by Adams’s original narrative, Shah’s work combines historical research with a gripping storyline, offering insights into a forgotten chapter of exploration and adventure.
Official synopsis Publisher
Inspired by a true story: In October 1815, an illiterate American sailor named Robert Adams was discovered roaming the streets of London, half-naked and starving. In the months that followed, high society was rocked by his tale.
At a time when the European powers were posturing for empire, there was one quest above all else, one destination to which no Christian had ever ventured and returned alive – Timbuctoo.
Regarded as a golden metropolis par excellence, an African El Dorado fashioned from the purest gold, it was for centuries a European obsession. The British, Germans, French, and others dispatched their most capable explorers to seek it out and to sack it. Most of them never returned.
The only nation uninterested in the mania for Timbuctoo was the fledgling United States. And so, when a young American sailor claimed to have visited the city as a guest of its king, while a white slave in Africa, it caused uproar on an unknown scale.
More shocking still was the sailor’s description of the El Dorado – as a poverty-stricken and wretched place – and the fact that he seemed blasé and uninterested at having been there at all.
Set against a backdrop of the British Regency, a time of ultimate decadence and avarice, of haves and have-nots, Robert Adams’s tale has been all but forgotten, until now. An astonishing story of survival and hardship, it’s a one touched with irony. A man who had set out to make his fame and fortune through trade, Robert Adams gained both, but by selling the tale of his journey.
Almost twenty years ago, Tahir Shah noticed an inch-thick quarto-sized book propping up a water pipe in the basement of the London Library. Pulling it out, he first set eyes on Robert Adams’s Narrative, published by John Murray in 1816.
The book became an obsession to Shah, just as Regency London was itself fixated with the golden metropolis of Timbuctoo. Packed with well-researched detail of the time, and inspired by Adams’s ordeal, Timbuctoo is a fast-past and compelling read. It’s a tale of treachery, greed, love and, above all else, of survival in the face of insurmountable odds.
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