——————————————————
SELECT REVIEWS
OF JRB CLIENT BOOKS
»W.
Bruce Cameron
»Mark
Obmascik
»Jennie
Shortridge
»Dean
King
»Alan
Cutler, Ph.D.
»Doris
A. Fuller & Natalie Fuller
——————————————————
W.
Bruce Cameron
How to Remodel
a Man : Tips and Techniques on Accomplishing Something You Know Is Impossible
but Want to Try Anyway
Author: W. Bruce Cameron
Hardcover: 288 pages
Publisher: St. Martin's Press (September 1, 2004)
ISBN: 031233317X
———————————
——————————————————
Mark Obmascik
We are pleased to share the
following praise for The Big Year:
The Big Year: A Tale of Man, Nature, and Fowl Obsession
ISBN: 0-7432-4545-8
Publication month: February 2004
Author: Mark Obmascik
Imprint: Free Press (272 pp.) / $25.00
———————————
Good news! In the Book Sense
Summer Paperback Picks for 2005, The Big Year by
Mark Obmascik will be one of five titles promoted for the entire summer
and will be included in special flyers that will go in the June monthly
Red Box mailing to all stores.
-----------------------------------
November 2004
Amazon.com picks #8 Best
Outdoors & Nature Book of 2004 The Big Year
by Mark Obmascik
-----------------------------------
July 2004
Great news for Mark Obmascik's
book The Big Year:
It is No. 6 on the Science
Best Seller list in the August 2004 issue of
Discover magazine!
-----------------------------------
THE SUNDAY STAR-TIMES
(Auckland, New Zealand)
April 18, 2004
Bird-brained
activity
Reviewed by
Iain Sharp
BIRD-WATCHERS
are a peculiar bunch of people. I say this without malice because in
a small, amateurish way I'm a bird-watcher myself. And in spite of its
budget-blowing looniness, I'd love to take part in the annual contest
known as the Big Year.
The aim is to
spot the greatest number of avian species on the North American continent
within a single calendar year. There's no monetary reward. Indeed, the
contestants are sure to end up seriously out of pocket as they travel
thousands of kilometres in pursuit of their goal.
There are no
referees either. They're not needed. When not watching birds the contestants
watch each other obsessively and howl wildly in protest at the slightest
sign of fraud.
To be a serious
contender, you need to notch up at least 700 species. The first 50 are
easy. Even the first 100 or so aren't too hard. Then you start running
into the same bloody owls, geese and ducks again and again. Denver-based
journalist Mark Obmascik follows the exploits of three champions who'll
risk anything to bump up their scores.
The book opens
in a Denny's fast-food restaurant in Arizona. Die-hard birder Sandy
Komito has chosen to eat here not because he likes the way they do their
ham and eggs but because great-tailed grackles and black vultures are
rumoured to roost in the trees outside.
Before long
he receives a tip-off that a Nutting's flycatcher has been spotted in
nearby Patagonia Lake State Park and off he roars. But about 30 rival
ornithologists arrive before him, all armed with heavy-duty Leica, Zeiss,
Swarovski or Kowa cameras to snap the nondescript little greyish-brown
critter. "The bird had paparazzi," Obmascik quips.
Later, we see
the competitors braving freezing temperatures on Saint Lawrence Island
in pursuit of puffins, fighting off swarms of mosquitoes as they paddle
after flamingoes in the Everglades and hiring helicopters to scour the
mountains of Nevada in quest of the rare Himalayan snowcock. Even if
wildlife stories aren 't usually your thing, chances are you'll be captivated
by this well-written--and often hilarious--tale of raving eccentricity
Copyright
2004 Independent News Auckland Ltd.
-----------------------------------
LOS ANGELES TIMES
April 13, 2004
When Bird Watchers Get Cutthroat
Bernadette Murphy, Special
to The Times
The year Sammy Sosa and Mark
McGwire were battling each other for the baseball single-season home
run record, a competition of a different sort but with the same nail-biting
tension was taking place across the continent. Each year on Jan. 1,
those in the birding world infected with a spirit of obsessive rivalry
embark on "The Big Year," a race to see who can see the most
breeds of birds in North America over the course of 365 days. In 1998,
the year limned by Denver journalist Mark Obmascik in his riveting narrative,
"The Big Year," the competition, which dates to 1900, was
the toughest ever, with three cutthroat birders wrangling for the lead.
There was Sandy Komito, a
street-smart roofing contractor from the Bronx who had set the earlier
Big Year record of 721 birds in 1987 and was prepared to spend most
of his time and between $8,000 and $12,000 a month to hop last-minute
flights to Alaska, Wisconsin, California, Oregon, New Mexico, Texas,
British Columbia and wherever else rare birds had reportedly been seen;
Al Levantin, a highly successful businessman who regularly took off
from his mansion in Aspen, Colo., to track down avian species even though
stalking the pelagic varieties over the ocean made him devastatingly
seasick; and Greg Miller, a stout software engineer from New Jersey
and the only competitor to somehow manage a full-time job during the
contest, who maxed out six credit cards and took loans from his dying
father to be a genuine contender.
Komito's plans for the year,
as described by Obmascik, were typical of the three: "He expected
to be away from home 270 of the next 365 days chasing winged creatures
around the continent. There were ptarmigans to trail on the frozen spine
of the Continental Divide in Colorado and hummingbirds to hunt in the
heat of the Arizona desert. He would prowl the moonlight for owls in
the North Woods of Minnesota and wade the beaches of South Florida at
dawn for boobies. He planned to race after birds by boat in Nova Scotia,
by bicycle in the Aleutian Islands and by helicopter in Nevada. Sleep
was not a priority, but when it came, he would be tossing in the army
bunks of Alaska and turning on the rolling waves of the Dry Tortugas."
"The Big Year"
combines the best of adventure tales, mystery writing and nature narratives,
and even readers who are not birders will soon find themselves cheering
the competitors on, bemoaning a wrong turn in the Florida Everglades,
braving mountain lions and mosquitoes and slogging through alligator-infested
swamps in search of the next bird. At one point, as Miller and Levantin
work together in pursuit of an exceptionally difficult-to-find breed,
the harrowing nature of their chase dawns on them. "Flying [in]
a helicopter in the mountains during a snowstorm to see a Himalayan
snowcock ... ," Obmascik reports, "was not what either man
had ever envisioned for his newspaper obituary." The winning result
of that year's race, 745 species (you'll have to read the book to find
out which man accomplished it), is the most impressive ever. Thanks
to the strongest El Nino year on record and a pre-9/11 world in which
the birders could easily catch last-minute flights, it is a record,
the author tells us, that may never be broken.
Although Obmascik did not
witness a single day of the Big Year and bases the book on extensive
interviews, his descriptions of birds -- and the humans who stalk them
-- are humorous and vivid. He describes the Baird's sparrow, for example,
as sounding "like song sparrows without a rasp, a Lauren Bacall
who had never taken up cigarettes." And of the birds seen on Attu,
the westernmost island of the Aleutians, where these extreme birders
spend an extended time, he writes that the "same drab brown birds
that barely rated a wintertime yawn in Ohio were transformed into brilliant
spring eye-catchers in Attu. Lapland longspurs stuck out with a gaudy
yellow bill, black mask and rufous cape; snow
buntings were a dramatic white-and-black. Alaska was the Honeymoon Hotel
for birds, and everyone wore the finest breeding plumage."
Along the way, Obmascik imparts
fascinating information on bird identification, as well as the phenomenon
of migration. We learn, for example, that at peak migration, as many
as 45 million songbirds arrive in a single night along 300 miles of
the Gulf Coast, from Corpus Christi, Texas, to Lake Charles, La. "That's
150,000 birds per mile, or 15,000 per city block," he writes.
Bursting with avian statistics,
eagle-eyed details as well as the best and worst of the human species'
competitive nature, "The Big Year" is a compelling read for
anyone who likes a good, feather-ruffling race. The book, in short,
is a lark.
Copyright 2004 The
Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times
All Rights Reserved
-----------------------------------
Great article
above the fold, front page, in the Washington Post Sunday Style section,
February 15, 2004:
For Birders, A Chance to Test Their Wings
By Libby Copeland
Birding is a cruel numbers game. Curse the wily whiskered auklet, the
fickle fork-tailed flycatcher, whose elusiveness keeps the earnest birder
from happiness. Think of all the exhausting hikes the birder must endure,
the perilous helicopter rides, the strained neck, the crushed dreams.
Think of the unfinished lists.
Birders love lists.
Almost all list the number of bird species they've seen in their lives.
Many also track the ones they've seen in their state or county. Some
keep lists of birds they have seen from their yards. A demented few
keep lists of the birds they see on television, and get upset when,
once again, the cry of a red-tailed hawk is dubbed over footage of a
bald eagle. There's a guy in Colorado who keeps a list of the number
of different birds he's seen on 15 years of trips to South America.
(So far, he has 1,983.) To check off a rare bird, birders travel to
dumpy islands and fetid dumpsters. They compete in contests like the
World Series of Birding and the Great Texas Birding Classic. They study
things like birding economics.
Every year, a few birders in the full plumage of their obsession enter
something called the North American Big Year, a 365-day grueling Olympics
of birding. (Birders are a proud people who disdain the passive term
"bird-watching.") At their own expense, these birders travel
across the continental United States, Alaska and Canada, pursuing the
675 species native to the region, as well as non-native birds who get
lost in migration. They memorize minute differences in wing markings.
They often identify birds by their calls alone. The one who records
the most birds gets nothing except the envy of fellow birders, which
is plenty in the birding world.
In his new book, "The Big Year," Mark Obmascik, a former Denver
Post reporter, tells the story of 1998, the biggest Big Year ever, by
reconstructing the journeys of three top birders. The winner saw a record-breaking
745 species, and spent about $100,000 doing it. Obmascik, who is on
a book tour, was in town last week, eating breakfast at a restaurant
near Union Station and marveling at the reaction he'd received from
callers on a Philadelphia radio show.
"After a while it began to sound like an AA meeting," Obmascik
says. " 'Hi, my name is Julie. I'm a birder. I got up at dawn to
go from Philly to a sewage lagoon in Baltimore to look at a Ross's gull.'
"
Sewage ponds, it turns out, are excellent habitat for certain birds.
"Rich with life," Obmascik says. In the book, he writes with
reverence of a Big Year competitor whose "secret weapon" is
the years he spent working with chemicals and inadvertently ruining
his own sense of smell. This allows the man to seek out a rare crow
at a steaming landfill with relative ease. Such are the joys of birding.
Obmascik, 42, is himself a convert to birding, after writing occasionally
about birds and birding for his paper. (He was also the lead writer
on the Denver Post's Columbine coverage, which won the Pulitzer Prize.)
Back home in Denver, he takes his sons on birding expeditions. When
he comes to Washington for his tour, he carries birding books, a scope
and tripod, padding the metal legs with pipe insulation to cushion his
shoulder. At Hains Point, he watches great black-backed gulls tearing
apart fish as they drift along on ice floes.
But what really fascinates him are the hardest of the hard-core birders,
mostly men, who travel countries and continents just to see an animal
"that has a brain the size of your pinky nail," he says. Several
years ago, for a news story, Obmascik observed birders who'd come to
see the mating grounds of the Gunnison sage grouse, off a dirt road
in Colorado. There was a group of "Harvard lawyers from Boston.
They had come all this way to watch some birds have sex before dawn,"
he says. "There was a vanload of Brits who were doing the chicken
tour of Colorado."
What makes a man do a chicken tour? It is a question that Obmascik can
never fully answer, though he points out how birding taps into a love
of nature, intellectual prowess and most of all the competitive spirit.
At High Island, Tex., a hot spot during spring migration, birders come
from England, Germany and Japan, Obmascik says. The good ones don't
need to consult their field guides to name the avian travelers.
"Calling out a mistake at High Island during migration is like
letting a grounder go between your legs during the World Series,"
Obmascik says.
But there seems to be something more to it than competition, something
that transforms birding from recreation to fixation. What is it?
"I asked these guys that a million different ways," Obmascik
says. "Finally I think one of them said, 'Why'd you fall in love
with your wife?' "
Maybe it is that inexplicable. Maybe it is fate. Oddly, among those
who adore chicken tours and landfill expeditions, a significant proportion
seem to have been born with avian last names. Thus, there is the young
man who used to edit the youth publication for the Colorado Springs-based
American Birding Association, Ben Winger, and the president of the National
Audubon Society, John Flicker. (The flicker, as any birder knows, is
a kind of woodpecker). There's the editor of American Birding's newsletter,
"Winging It," whose name is Matt Pelikan.
"For me, birding is a way of understanding the world -- it's like
a filter," says Pelikan, who's been birding for 40 of his 45 years.
"I don't see surroundings; I see bird habitats. That probably makes
me sound like a wack job."
Then there's the professor who heads McGill University's Avian Science
and Conservation Centre, whose name is David Bird (not to be confused
with the distinguished Virginia ornithologist Mitchell Byrd). Bird has
always been into birds. Once, as a kid, he ruined his mother's canasta
party by releasing a flock of swallows in the house. Nowadays, he gives
salacious talks at stops on the bird circuit, such as the swan festival
and the turkey vulture festival, with titles like "How Birds Do
It."
"Cheating, necrophilia, homosexuality, rape -- everything,"
Bird says. "The birds are into some very serious sex, actually."
The most sympathetic of Obmascik's three subjects is Greg Miller, now
46, who lived in Lusby, Md., and worked as a computer programmer when
he embarked on his Big Year. (He now lives in Sugarcreek, Ohio, and
runs a bird-guiding business.) Broke and newly divorced, Miller worked
13-hour days so he could take long weekends and maxed out five credit
cards to make his journey. For three days he subsisted on "Jif
and Mister Salty," he says. Halfway through, "I was burnt
to a crispy critter," but borrowed $5,000 from his dad to keep
going.
Miller really likes lists. He has been known to list the birds he sees
while driving along one road, then start a new list as the car turns
onto a new road. After he returned from his Big Year, he developed leukemia,
which has been in remission for 21/2 years now. While being treated
with chemotherapy, he counted birds from his hospital window.
Today, he still has two more credit cards to pay off from his birding
adventure, but no regrets.
"My dream year," he calls it.
Alas, there may never be a year like 1998 again. Obmascik ticks off
several reasons, including what he calls the strongest fluctuations
of the warm El Niño current off Ecuador, which spawned storms
that blew many birds off course and into the scope range of North American
birders.
Which doesn't mean that birders will stop doing their Big Years, their
county lists, their state lists, their long drives. There will always
be the lure of the beautiful and the rare.
Bill Maynard, who plans birding conventions for American Birding, spent
15 years trying to see 700 birds in North America. He finally succeeded
three years ago. He draws the line, though, at certain types of lists.
Counting birds you see while waiting in airports, for example.
"I have a friend who does that," Maynard allows. "Kind
of obsessive."
Birders often seem consumed by their passion, but Maynard, for one,
has other hobbies. He also collects stamps.
Stamps with birds on them.
-----------------------------------
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
December 1, 2003
In one of the wackiest competitions
around, every year hundreds of obsessed bird watchers participate in
a contest known as the North American Big Year. Hoping to be the one
to spot the most species during the course of the year, each birder
spends 365 days racing around the continental U.S. and Canada compiling
lists of birds, all for the glory of being recognized by the American
Birding Association as the Big Year birding champion of North America.
In this entertaining book, Obmascik, a journalist with the Denver Post,
tells the stories of the three top contenders in the 1998 American Big
Year: a wisecracking industrial roofing contractor from New Jersey who
aims to break his previous record and win for a second time; a suave
corporate chief executive from Colorado; and a 225-pound nuclear power
plant software engineer from Maryland. Obmascik bases his story on post-competition
interviews but writes so well that it sounds as if he had been there
every step of the way. In a freewheeling style that moves around as
fast as his subjects, the author follows each of the three birding fanatics
as they travel thousands of miles in search of such hard-to-find species
as the crested myna, the pink-footed goose and the fork-tailed flycatcher,
spending thousands of dollars and braving rain, sleet, snowstorms, swamps,
deserts, mosquitoes and garbage dumps in their attempts to outdo each
other. By not revealing the outcome until the end of the book, Obmascik
keeps the reader guessing in this fun account of a whirlwind pursuit
of birding fame. (Feb.)
-----------------------------------
KIRKUS REVIEWS
November 15, 2003
Bemused appreciation from
Denver Post reporter Obmascik of a year-long quest to eyeball or hear
as many bird breeds as possible in the US and Canada.
The Big Year was 1998, the
protagonists were Sandy Komito, a roofing contractor from New Jersey;
Al Levantin, a well-heeled businessman; and Greg Miller, a software
jock for a nuclear power plant. As enjoyably chronicled by Obmascik,
all three went to punishing lengths to tally the highest number of bird
species encountered for the year. It was a bit like The Great Race,
except that here there would be no fraud or deceit: witnesses would
be good, photos even better, but trust was imperative; there would even
be instances of “honor among top birders: if one asked for help,
the other provided it.” Pocketbooks would be stretched, as would
the limits of physical endurance, in mad dashes for vagrants, accidentals,
and true freaks made public by rare-bird alerts. Sometimes a good sighting
was just a matter of being in the right place, or of reaping the bounty
served by El Nino, and chasing birds via air travel was certainly easier
in those pre-9/11 days. The author, a bit of a birder himself, knows
how to wring joy out of this birding bender; he vividly conveys the
delight in identifying a white-throated robin, a clay-colored robin,
a rufous-backed robin, a chachalacas (“that sounded as if Ethel
Merman had swallowed a rusty trombone”), a yellow rail (“the
Greta Garbo of the bird world”), or “the green microburst
of energy called Xantus’s hummingbird.” Obmascik will light
a tinderbox of bird lust in unsuspecting readers who have never given
a thought to “Le Conte’s thrasher, a notoriously elusive
soil-digger of the saltbush desert.
You’ll gladly add
this one to your own list—of surprisingly good books. (Film rights
to Dreamworks, with Red Hour Films.)
——————————————————
Dean
King
SKELETONS ON
THE ZAHARA: A True Story of Survival
ISBN 0-316-83514-5
Author: Dean King
Little, Brown, $24.95 (368p)
———————————
More good news on the best-selling
paperback edition of Skeletons on the Zahara
by Dean H. King:
New York Times Extended Bestseller
List for Sunday, May 22, 2005:
SKELETON ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #18
Book Sense National Bestsellers:
SKELETON ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #13
SEBA (Southeast Booksellers
Association) Bestsellers:
SKELETONS ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #5
MPBA (Mountains and Plains
Booksellers Association) Bestsellers:
SKELETONS ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #15
NCIBA (Northern California
Booksellers Association) Bestsellers:
SKELTONS ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #11
SCBA (Southern California
Booksellers Association) Bestsellers:
SKELETONS ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #13
NAIBA (New Atlantic Booksellers
Association) Bestsellers:
SKELETONS ON THE ZAHARA, King, Trade Paperback Non-Fiction, #10
-----------------------------------
Pittsburgh Tribune-Review
by Regis Behe
Sunday, January 2,
2005
"Skeletons on
the Zahara: A True Story of Survival" (Little, Brown),
Dean King. A remarkable retelling of the journey of the ship Commerce,
a U.S. merchant ship that ran aground off the west coast of Africa at
Cape Bojador in 1815. King relates the hellish experiences of Captain
James Riley and his crew (which inspired Henry David Thoreau and Abraham
Lincoln) with vivid and often gut-wrenching prose that makes the imaginary
trials of reality shows such as "Survivor" pale in comparison.
-----------------------------------
November 2004
Amazon.com picks #6 Best
History Book of 2004 Skeletons on the Zahara
by Dean King
-----------------------------------
LONDON TIMES
June 2004
Skeletons on the
Zahara
Known for his biography of the elusive Patrick O'Brian...Dean King
has emerged from the great man's shadow with a compelling work in his
own right... Once ashore, King's narrative, like Riley's leadership,
grows in stature and certaintly... As King notes, the understanding,
respect and compassion between these representatives of the Christian
and Muslim worlds offers a timely example in our own troubled age.
-----------------------------------
THE WASHINGTON POST
Sunday, April 11, 2004
Desert Storm
The grisly travails of a shipwrecked crew.
Reviewed by Grace Lichtenstein
SKELETONS ON THE ZAHARA
By Dean King. Little, Brown. 353 pp. $24.95
The latest in the recent
spate of true disaster tales, Skeletons on the Zahara should
come with a warning sticker like those on prescription drug bottles:
Do Not Take With Food. Dean King, author of a well-received biography
of novelist Patrick O'Brian, recounts the tribulations of a crew of
American sailors who were shipwrecked off the coast of Africa in 1815,
captured, sold into slavery, fed almost nothing, forced to drink camel
urine, and then schlepped all over the desert sands.
Joking aside, Skeletons is
a page-turner, replete with gruesome details about thirst, a diet of
dried locusts and animal bone marrow, relentless exposure to the sun
and the changes in bodily functions that result. King's plot is right
out of Homer: Will the stalwart captain and his mates ever see home
again? He has structured it in such cinematic terms that one can almost
see the words "An Anthony Minghella film" superimposed on
the opening scene -- a caravan of 1,000 Arab merchants and their 4,000
camels stretched across the Sahara, caught in a howling sandstorm.
One merchant, Sidi Hamet,
had made repeated trips from Morocco to Tombucktoo (King prefers older
spellings of place-names, hence the "Zahara" of the title),
ferrying loads of barley, cloth, salt and other goods to be traded for
gold, exotic items such as ostrich feathers and slaves. He happened
upon a nomad's tent camp, where a bedraggled slave who turned out to
be an American sea captain made him an enticing offer: Bring him and
his scattered crew to safety in a northern settlement, and they would
be ransomed for "many pieces of silver." Hamet was in a quandary.
Unsure of whether to trust the word of a "Christian dog,"
he prayed to Allah for guidance.
Flash back to Middletown,
Conn., a bustling New England shipping center, at the close of the War
of 1812. Capt. James Riley and his crew of 10 were preparing the merchant
brig Commerce for an ambitious journey. They would go first
to New Orleans, then the West Indies and on to Gibraltar and the Cape
Verde islands off the African coast, where they would buy salt, a commodity
that should earn a handsome profit back in the United States.
Once the ship is under sail,
the story gathers force. King has based his account on Riley's own narrative,
which was published in 1817 and had a wide readership throughout the
19th century. (King says that Abraham Lincoln was among its fans and
never forgot the saga of Riley's ordeal.) In Gibraltar, the crew was
almost drowned before the action began, as a wave washed over their
longboat after a visit with another ship. King quotes Riley as writing
ominously, "We were spared in order to suffer a severer doom."
Indeed, doom hovered over the ship when it ran aground off Cape Bojador
in the middle of nothing, just north of the Tropic of Cancer.
When the sailors made their
first foray onshore, they were driven away by a band of wild local folk.
They escaped in their longboat, only to be shipwrecked again farther
south. Soon, fierce nomads captured them, stole most of their clothes
and split them up among different bands to be bought, sold and bartered
as property.
At this point, the Sahara
becomes the star of the story. King does a fine job of bringing readers
up to speed at judicious intervals on the customs of the time both in
the seafaring world and in global geopolitics. However, the knowledge
he shares about the hostility of the desert climate, the brutality of
the warring tribes that inhabit it but cannot tame it, and the toll
it takes on people and animals alike is graphic and scary. One captive
went temporarily blind from the sand and sun. Sores on bodies reduced
to skin and bone made walking and even sleeping agonizing. A swarm of
locusts carpeted the landscape; the nomads gathered and ate them. A
former slave reportedly gnawed on his own limbs for sustenance. The
castaways on "Survivor" and contestants on "Fear Factor"
wouldn't have lasted an hour.
As King writes, "the
Saharan climate was arguably the most extreme on earth. Its temperature
could sizzle at more than 120 degrees Fahrenheit in the shade, the ground
temperature soaring 50 degrees higher in the sun; at night, the thermometer
could plunge as much as 85 degrees. . . . While only about a tenth of
the Sahara is covered in barren sand dunes . . . almost equally formidable
are its stepped plains of wind-stripped rock covered in boulders, stones,
and dust." Thirsty yet? King interrupts his tale just long enough
for vivid discourses on how humans suffer through various stages of
dehydration; the gastrointestinal workings of camels; Saharan customs
(no matter who finds food, anyone in the vicinity can elbow his way
into a meal; thieves are entitled to take anything left unwatched by
its owner); and nomads' dietary preferences (they don't like fish and,
being Muslim, won't eat pork).
The redoubtable Riley promised
Hamet a reward from a friend in Swearah (known today as Essaouira, in
southern Morocco) if Hamet could get the dispersed sailors there safely.
The question became: Could Hamet sneak past not just other marauding
bands, who would love to rob him of his bounty, but also his nasty father-in-law,
Sheik Ali? Early on, Riley had a dream that, after many trials, he would
encounter his savior, a man in Western dress on horseback. As the story's
unremitting barbarism continues, not just the Commerce's crew
but also the reader is likely to pine for the greenery of Connecticut.
Even armchair adventurers
satiated with exotic travelogues will appreciate heroism amid adversity
in this fast-paced account of slow torture -- and an almost-happy ending.
•
Grace Lichtenstein, a former
correspondent for the New York Times, is the author of six books.
© 2004 The
Washington Post Company
-----------------------------------
DAILY MAIL (UK)
April 2004
Genuinely gripping, full
of twists and turns of fate ... mesmerising ... The torturous journey,
with parched tongues and aching bones, in constant fear of bandits who
might capture and enslave them, is described in unsparing detail ...
The game of bluff and double bluff kept the crewman's lives on a knife-edge.
If you want to know the ending, the Hollywood movie can't be too far
behind.
-----------------------------------
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC
ADVENTURE
January 27, 2004
Author's Sahara Trek
Inspired by Classic Tale
by Mark Kirby
When the American brig Commerce
ran aground on the coast of northwest Africa in 1815, Captain James
Riley and his crew knew enough to be terrified. Accounts written by
other mariners shipwrecked along the same coast chronicled brutal enslavement
at the hands of ruthless desert nomads. A few reports suggested that
the natives were cannibals.
Rather than test the validity
of those claims, the sailors quickly set back to sea in a longboat.
Nine days later, plagued by thirst and suffering from exposure, they
had no chance but to return to shore. Soon after, the crew was captured
by Bedouins and forced to march across the Sahara for days with little
food or water. Riley witnessed one of his men, in a famine-induced delirium,
gnawing at the sun-charred flesh of his own forearm.
Eventually Riley convinced
a desert trader named Sidi Hamet to purchase him and four members of
his crew and take them north—to a trading post where they could
be ransomed and returned home. Along the way, Riley and Hamet forged
a bond that saw them through severe deprivation, an ambush by bandits,
and the intrigues of Hamet's father-in-law, who sought personal profit
from the sale of the crew.
When Riley finally reached
safety in 1817, he recorded his ordeal which was eventually titled Sufferings
in Africa. The book, widely read during the 19th century, went
largely forgotten for over a hundred years.
Upon rediscovering Riley's
classic survival narrative, author Dean King decided to travel to what
is today the Morocco-controlled territory of Western Sahara to retrace
Riley's route. Dean's retelling of Riley's story, titled Skeletons
on the Zahara, is due out in February from Little, Brown,
and Co., Inc. Excerpts from King's book and impressions of his trip
appear in "The Cruelest Journey" in the February 2003 issue
of National Geographic Adventure magazine. In the following
interview, King recalls his journey tracking Riley's footprints across
Saharan sands.
How did you discover
Riley's narrative? What inspired you to retell it?
I was in the New York Yacht
Club library, researching my previous book [Harbors and High Seas:
An Atlas and Geographical Guide to the Complete Aubrey-Maturin Novels
of Patrick O'Brian]. On one of the shelves, I spotted an old leather-bound
book with the title Sufferings in Africa on the spine. Intrigued,
I pulled it off the shelf and started reading. I ended up sitting down
in an old leather club chair and reading for two days straight. I couldn't
put it down; I realized that I'd uncovered a lost treasure.
Of all the brutal
deprivations and remarkable struggles that faced the members of the
Commerce on their journey, what stands out in your mind as
the most grueling?
Definitely the fact that
they were going on forced marches while consuming so little food and
water. The survivors lost half their body weight. Riley reported that
he went from 240 pounds (109 kilograms) to 120 (54 kilograms) and that
some of his men at the end of the ordeal weighed around 40 pounds (18
kilograms). Before becoming enslaved, they'd already been at sea for
nine days, scorched by the sun and without food. It's one thing to be
traveling with no provisions and trying to save your own life. It's
another being forced across the desert as a slave, which the men were
forced to do for quite a while before Riley set out with Sidi Hamet
on his epic journey north. As slaves, they traveled with no hope. The
stamina and heart it took to keep going is remarkable.
What has been the
greatest barrier to reconstructing the ordeal of the Commerce?
The biggest challenge for
me was to take the material I had and make it come alive for today's
reader. The way authors told a story back then was different than the
way that we would tell a story today. They didn't write their emotions
into a story; they didn't describe a lot of things in detail and omitted
much of the sensory stuff that we're used to getting now. That was one
of the reasons I decided to go to Western Sahara. I needed to run on
the sharp stones that the sailors described running across and feel
what that felt like so that I could breathe their experience into the
modern retelling of the story.
So recovering those
sensory impressions was the main reason behind your trip to Western
Sahara?
Yes, but I also wanted to
verify the accuracy of what Riley and Robbins reported [Archibald Robbins,
a sailor aboard the Commerce who suffered an additional 19th
month of captivity, also published an account of the wreck]. In their
time, there were a lot of wild tales circulating, both in print and
verbally, but I immediately realized when I read Riley's memoir that
it was authentic. He took his reporting seriously, but in the book he
sometimes wrote far-fetched things—like seeing people who were
300 years old. He also reported that the nomads lived off of camel milk
and camel urine. I didn't know if that was really possible. It seemed
unrealistic to me. I felt a need to research and find out what was true,
and the surprising thing was that a lot of what Riley reported still
happens today.
What's a good example?
The thing that hit me the
hardest was when I was riding with a guide in a Land Rover and I noticed
that he had a long thin scar on his neck. I remembered reading in Riley
that the nomads treated illnesses by heating up a long blade, the size
of a Bowie knife, and using the back end to brand different parts of
the body—typically, the ankles, wrist, shoulders, neck. One of
the sailors was treated that way for dysentery in Riley's narrative.
I found it horrific and unbelievable. Riley's critics didn't believe
it either. I asked the driver how he got the scar and he told me that
he had been very sick several years ago and had been treated in the
exact way Riley described. My jaw dropped. I was shocked that that kind
of medical treatment is still being used today. He told me that the
treatment saved his life and that he also treats his children with it.
In the book, Riley
describes being so thirsty that he is driven to drink camel urine. Did
you get a chance to try camel urine yourself?
I did not taste camel urine,
but I did inquire about it. One of my guides was quite loquacious on
the topic and said that yes, indeed, they do drink camel urine on occasion,
particularly the urine of a pregnant camel because it has certain nutrients
and is believed to help cure stomach ailments and mouth sores. And,
of course, if you're dying of thirst you will drink any kind of camel
urine. The fact that Riley reported that the nomads preferred camel
urine to their own was somewhat shocking, but once you get over there,
you find out that it's not that uncommon.
What was the most
trying aspect of your attempt to retrace Riley's steps?
From my reading, I had expected
that we would be able to go farther and faster on the camels than we
were actually able to. I trained for the trip to prepare for it, as
did the people who were with me. But the camels and the camel drivers,
they're just not used to doing the kind of hard, forced march that I
wanted to reenact. I wanted to do up to 50 miles (80 kilometers) a day.
It turned out that if we could do 30 miles (48 kilometers) that was
an excellent day. A more typical day would be 20 (32 kilometers). Riley
reported doing up to 100 (161 kilometers). I doubt that he was actually
doing that many, but I think that sometimes he did travel 50, 60 miles
(97 kilometers) in a day. T.E. Lawrence [a.k.a. Lawrence of Arabia]
once did 100 miles in a day, but Lawrence was known for almost killing
his camels. His guides wouldn't ride with him at times because he pushed
the camels so hard.
How was your own
experience astride a camel?
Your relationship with your
camel is a remarkable thing. It's like nothing we know. The people of
the Sahara measure their wealth in camels. Camels provide their food—camel
milk—and older, lame camels are slaughtered for meat. They're
also your transportation. You rely on the camel so much that you love
your camel. Even being there for a short time, I discovered that the
camel is such an essential aspect of life on the desert that you just
have to respect the camel. It's a much different kind of relationship
than we know with our animals.
What protections
from the harsh Sahara were available to you today that weren't available
to Riley and his men?
Sunglasses were huge. One
of the sailors, Roger Porter, went sun blind toward the end. The glare
fried his eyes; he eventually recovered after not being able to see
for a good stretch of time. We also had saddles for our camels and,
importantly, we had clothes. For the most part, the sailors didn't have
any clothes because the clothes that they had were so valuable to the
nomads that they were all taken. Along the Western Sahara, there are
fierce winds. The sand blows everywhere and if you don't have what they
called a shesh, sand pretty much penetrates everywhere—it
gets in your ears, up your nose, in your mouth. Even if you have that
protective gear on, it still gets everywhere. I was walking across a
desert beach to look at a wrecked ship. I had my reading glasses in
a case in my pocket. The sand somehow blew in, entered my pocket, got
into my glasses case, and scratched up the lenses. A photographer will
tell you that every photographic lens must be kept in a sealed plastic
bag.
After your experience
in the desert, do you think you could have survived the ordeal of the
Commerce?
I like to think that I could
have dug deep and come up with what it takes to survive that kind of
ordeal. But, in the knowledge that a person can be broken, that your
spirit can be broken, I'm not sure that you can entirely control yourself.
I know that at one point, Riley's spirit was broken and he looked for
a rock to bash his own head on. But he survived that moment and transcended
it and it actually gave him more strength. So I think that if you're
in that kind of situation, you're going to face a crisis, or it may
be several crises, and those are the moments that you have to figure
out how to get through and gather strength from. You just don't know.
I like to think I could have faced it.
-----------------------------------
RICHMOND TIMES-DISPATCH
April 20, 2004
DreamWorks takes
Dean King book
BY JANN MALONE
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER
DreamWorks, Steven Spielberg's movie production company, has bought
the rights to Richmond author Dean King's latest book, "Skeletons
on the Zahara."
"This means that the
movie is much more likely to be made," King said. "As they
are saying, it is now on the fast track, and they plan to begin filming
before the end of the year. Before DreamWorks got involved, I don't
think that was a likelihood.
"It is a thrill to know
that the greatest movie mind in Hollywood is moved by 'Skeletons on
the Zahara' and wants his studio involved in the making of the movie."
King's book, which has gotten
excellent reviews from newspapers and magazines around the country,
is the nonfiction account of a group of merchant seamen whose ship,
the Commerce, crashed onto the rocks below Africa's Sahara Desert in
1815.
The ship's crew was captured
and enslaved by nomads. During a forced march across the desert, they
suffered from dehydration, starvation and exposure.
"The great thing about
having Spielberg involved is that I think he has moved beyond just making
dramatic, entertaining films. He wants to make great films that have
a big impact on the national conversation and on how we see ourselves
as Americans and how we view history.
"His recent movies,
'Saving Private Ryan,' 'Amistad' and 'Schindler's List' did just that,
and he was involved in the making of 'Band of Brothers.' So to know
that 'Skeletons on the Zahara' will be handled, at least in part, by
a moviemaker with that sort of vision is a great relief and very gratifying."
King realizes just how lucky
he is. "My experience with Hollywood so far has been contrary to
all the stereotypes," he said. "The scriptwriters, Doug Miro
and Carlo Bernard, are thoughtful, responsive, down-to-earth guys who
are easy to talk to and interested in all my thoughts on the nuances
of the story and the characters."
King sounds so happy at these
developments that money issues seem secondary to the story, but, just
for the record, if the movie gets made, King will receive a payment
in the mid-six figures. "And then," he said, "I get a
percentage of the net, which I am told not to count on."
-----------------------------------
VARIETY.COM
D'Works digs 'Skeletons'
Lensing expected to begin by year's end
By NICOLE LAPORTE
Intermedia and DreamWorks are teaming up on "Skeletons of the Sahara,"
a film based on the nonfiction book by Dean H. King about American sailors
shipwrecked in Africa in the 19th century.
Project, which marks one
of the first deals announced by DreamWorks' new production prexy Adam
Goodman, is on the fast track at the studio. Shooting is expected to
begin by the end of the year. A director and cast must still be found.
In the partnership, DreamWorks
will co-finance the project and provide domestic distribution while
Intermedia will produce with Baltimore/Spring Creek producers Paula
Weinstein and Barry Levinson.
Carlo Bernard and Doug Miro
penned the script. They wrote "The Great Raid" for Miramax
and are finishing the rewrite of "The Talisman" for DreamWorks.
Mark Sourian is overseeing
the pic for DreamWorks.
"Skeletons" covers
the trials of several American sailors who were shipwrecked off the
coast of North Africa in 1815, captured by the Bedouins and sold into
slavery. Intermedia initially optioned the rights to King's book in
2001, after it was brought to the company by Intermedia exec Alex Litvak.
Scott Kroopf, president of
Intermedia's motion picture group, said "Skeletons" is a timely
project because it "deals with the development of a cross-cultural
bond between Arabs and Americans in a way that is both relevant and
positive."
Intermedia is also partnering
with Universal on "The 11th Hour," a movie about the traitorous
FBI agent Robert Hanssen. Billy Ray directs.
Both films mark a growing
effort by the shingle to work with studios on co-financing and co-producing
projects.
Read the full article at:
http://www.variety.com/story.asp?l=story&a=VR1117903211&c=1236
-----------------------------------
RICHMOND.COM EXCLUSIVE
Dean King's Dreamworks
Steven Spielberg snaps up the movie rights to Richmond author's latest
page-turner.
Colleen Curran
Richmond.com
Friday April 9, 2004
When Richmond author Dean
King got back from book tour this week, he found the front door covered
with his kids' "Welcome Home!" signs and the startling news
that Steven Spielberg's production company, Dreamworks, just bought
the rights to his scorching bestseller, "Skeletons on the Zahara".
How's that for a homecoming?
"I'm a little worn out,"
King says, sitting on his West End back porch and drinking tea. He surveys
the sloping backyard that was trashed by Hurricane Isabel and adds,
"but it's great."
"Skeletons on the Zahara,"
(Little, Brown, $24.95) is the true story of Capt. James Riley and his
Connecticut-based crew's disastrous shipwreck off the African coast
in 1815. Captured by nomads and sold into slavery, Riley and his men
were forced on a death-march across the Sahara Desert, where they endured
starvation, dehydration, plagues of locusts, sandstorms and quite often,
death. Captain Riley eventually met a Muslim trader named Sidi Hamet
and the two men became unexpected allies in order to survive.
Winning rave reviews from
places like the Los Angeles Times, and Entertainment Weekly, "Skeletons
on the Zahara" has already hit the San Francisco Chronicle's non-fiction
bestseller list at No.6 and continues to climb the New York Times extended
bestseller list at No. 20.
Now, with Dreamworks snapping
up the movie rights, it looks like "Skeletons on the Zahara"
might very well be coming to a theater near you.
Screenwriters Doug Miro and
Carlo Bernard have been behind King's project since they first saw his
book proposal in 2001. They wrote their screenplay based on King's proposal
and shopped it around to Hollywood Studios, with Intermedia picking
up the rights. "We loved it...I love the book, but Dean's proposal
is still the best I've ever read," Miro says.
After years of effort, their
work paid off when Dreamworks bought the movie rights from Intermedia
to get the script made into a movie.
"We loved the breadth
of the adventure in a land little travelled and so alien to its explorers,
we were moved by the depth of their suffering, but above all we were
fascinated by the relationship between these two very different men
-- Riley and Sidi," Miro says. "Their growing friendship,
initially hindered by mistrust and lies but finally fostered by surprising
open-mindedness and intelligence, was both emotionally resonant and
allowed us the opportunity to speak about the world's current state
of affairs."
Back in Richmond, King is
still processing the good news.
"Having Dreamworks involved
is a bit of a fantasy," King admits. "It's especially cool
that Spielberg, who is one of the all-time great storytellers in any
medium, is so intrigued by the tale. I find that very gratifying."
Not bad for a kid who graduated
from St. Christopher's.
After high school, King attended
Chapel Hill and eventually moved to New York, where he wrote for Esquire
and the New York Times. The author of nine books to date, including
his popular biography, "Patrick O'Brian: A Life," King moved
back to Richmond in 1997 along with his wife and daughters, to live
in the sprawling West End home where he grew up.
But moving back to Richmond
hasn't cramped King's writing, or traveling, style.
To research "Skeletons
on the Zahara," King paid a trip to the Sahara while on assignment
for National Geographic Adventure. Because he wanted to experience what
Capt. Riley and his men endured, King subjected himself to many of the
same trials. He ran barefoot across the burning sand and jagged rocks.
He scaled the devastating cliffs. He endured the camel's torturous gait,
called "the rack."
"It was brutal,"
King says. "After [riding for] 20 miles, I was bleeding through
a hole in my back. It was like sitting on a jackhammer."
But King's attention to the
gory details paid off. Entertainment Weekly writes, "King is almost
pornographic in his description of physical pain: skin bubbles, eyeballs
burn, lips blacken, and men shrivel to less than 90 pounds…It's
sensational stuff."
Although the trans-Atlantic
trip provided King with enough great clips to make an arresting 12-minute
documentary that he brings to book readings, it's not the only way he
collected material for the book.
King wrote and did much of
the research for "Skeletons on the Zahara" here in Richmond.
"My books are very research-intensive.
I used all the local libraries," King says. "I couldn't have
done it without inter-library loan. Any book that exists, I can get
here. I used the libraries at the University of Richmond, the Library
of Virginia…there's even an astronomer at the Science Museum of
Virginia who could research and tell me if there was moonlight on a
specific night or not."
King even worked on the book
through Hurricane Isabel, penciling in revisions by candlelight.
The result is a deftly written,
page-turning thriller that takes readers on a break-neck journey across
the Sahara.
Next week, King reads from
"Skeletons on the Zahara" at the Library of Virginia. He'll
also be showing the 12-minute documentary, edited by several top-tier
Richmond studios.
Even C-SPAN is making the
trek to Richmond to tape the reading. The segment will air on May 1
at 11 p.m. and May 2 at 8 p.m.
Even though his book might
be Hollywood's hottest property, King has no plans to leave Richmond.
Instead, he surveys his lawn and talks to the neighbors about the work
he's doing on his yard this weekend. Isabel took down three trees and
King is replanting this spring.
"I'm here [in Richmond]
for good," King says with a grin. "I love it."
-----------------------------------
PITTSBURGH TRIBUNE-REVIEW
Sunday, March 28, 2004
Author Dean King
revisits the amazing journey of Capt. James Riley
By Regis Behe
The leather spine of the
book simply read "Sufferings in Africa." When writer Dean
King opened it nine years ago in the library of the New York Yacht Club,
he had no idea he was about to read an adventure story that influenced
Abraham Lincoln, James Fennimore Cooper and Henry David Thoreau.
"It was an amazing narrative
from this captain, this memoir of suffering, struggle and, ultimately,
transformation and redemption on the desert," says King, author
of "Skeletons on the Zahara."
"Sufferings in Africa"
was written by Capt. James Riley. In May of 1815, Riley and his crew
of the Commerce left Connecticut on a voyage that would take them first
to New Orleans, then the Cape Verde Islands, before returning home.
Unfortunately, the ship ran
aground off the coast of West Africa near the Canary Islands. Thus began
a harrowing adventure in which the crew was forced to endure some of
the harshest conditions known to man -- then and now. They were enslaved,
separated and forced to serve their captors, nomadic Arabs who despised
them because they were Christians. Nearly naked, the crew endured long
marches across what was then called the Zahara, or Great Desert, sometimes
subsisting on urine -- their own and camel's.
Food was scarce at all times.
Riley's normal weight was 240 pounds. At the end of his 800-mile, two-month
journey, when a British consulate in Morocco paid a ransom for Riley
and four of his crew, he weighed less than 90 pounds.
King says he was especially
struck by the crew's enslavement.
"As Americans, we champion
freedom so much," King says. "The idea of being enslaved in
another land was intriguing."
A nautical expert whose other
books include a biography of "Master and Commander" novelist
Patrick O'Brian, King especially noted Riley's attention to detail.
"It was richer, it had
more psychological and spiritual realization than most accounts,"
King says. "Also, quite remarkably, there's this amazing relationship
the captain developed with the Arab trader (Sidi Hamet) who transported
him 800 miles across the Sahara."
When Riley and his crew were
ransomed, he hired a translator to interview Hamet. Thus, in Riley's
account -- and in "Skeletons" -- there is the story of Hamet's
life, which includes two crossings of the desert to Timbuktu and tales
of caravans besieged by sandstorms and attacking enemy tribes.
King, however, knew that
sailors have long been notorious for spinning yarns and tall tales,
and wanted another confirming source. He found that in "A Journal:
Comprising an Account of the Loss of the Brig Commerce ..." by
Archibald Robbins, an able seaman on the Commerce who had written his
own version of the Homeric journey.
No one had ever compared
the two stories, and King found that they meshed in most details. But
in order to completely understand the travails of the sailors, King
decided he needed to personally retrace as much of their trail as possible.
What he found was a land that, in many ways, has remained relatively
unchanged for the past 200 years.
"Riley is really the
first Western ethnographer of that region, and his observations on the
nomadic tribes are still quoted," King says. "Much to my surprise,
a lot of what he reported that seemed wild in 1815 still exists today.
"I expected to go there
and hopefully be able to identify landmarks on his route, and see the
terrain, but I didn't expect to be able to confirm the social customs
he reported. But I found plenty of cases where I found the exact same
things he reported."
King calls the area on Africa's
west coast, where the Sahara Desert borders the Atlantic Ocean, a "no
man's and nomad's" land. Since 1975, when Spain relinquished control,
the area has been in turmoil as Morocco and Mauritania have both sought
control while Algeria supported a movement by indigenous peoples. The
longest-running United Nations refugee camps are located on the Mauritanian
border, but the area rarely gets international attention because all
that is at stake are fishing rights and some trace minerals.
"Consequently, no one
goes there," King says.
But he did, and one of the
great moments of his trip was when one of his guides, Mohammed El Arab,
taught him how to ride a camel.
"The gait of a camel
is called a rack, and you quickly find out why," King says. "Both
legs on either side swing together, and it's a very rough ride because
they are very (muscular) and hard."
Almost as soon as King first
mounted his camel, it took off running. King lost his balance and was
hanging to one side as the beast's legs whipsawed next to him. He fell
to the sandy beach, stunned and a little scared.
"Mohammed comes riding
up to me and says, 'King, what are you doing? That was your fault.'
I'm sort of scratching my head wondering how that was my fault, still
checking my bones. Then he says, 'It doesn't matter, because camels
are sacred animals; they are blessed by Allah. Those who fall from camels
are never hurt.'"
After King got over the shock
of his fall, he realized it was a great moment. In "Sufferings
in Africa," Riley had told a story that eerily matched King's camel
debacle.
"To have that almost
exact same experience was amazing," King says. "The only way
to understand the desert and the Bedouin is to understand the camel.
Camels can be cantankerous, smelly beasts, but you learn to respect
and love your camel because it's your transportation. They eat shrub
brush and turn it into nutrition-rich milk, so it's your food. If the
camel goes lame or gets old, you can kill it and eat it."
Lincoln cited "Sufferings
in Africa" as one of the half-dozen most influential books of his
youth, and Riley himself became a staunch abolitionist as the result
of his experiences. In today's fractious international climate, King
thinks the book remains timely and important. Riley and Hamet were able
to work together despite different goals and no common language.
"Here we have a clash
of Eastern and Western cultures," King says, "and two guys
who manage to overcome their differences and achieve a common goal."
-----------------------------------
TIME MAGAZINE
Monday, March 1, 2004
A R T S / B O O K
S
Sailing the Seas of Sand
A true tale of mariners marooned in the Sahara
By LEV GROSSMAN
Abraham Lincoln once made a list of the books that had influenced him.
Mostly he went for the heavy hitters — Plutarch, the Bible, The
Pilgrim's Progress — but one of his choices sticks out for its
total obscurity: James Riley's An Authentic Narrative of the Loss of
the American Brig Commerce, a memoir by a luckless sea captain who was
shipwrecked on the Saharan coast of Africa, where unspeakably horrible
things happened to him. Dean King, the author of a biography of Patrick
O'Brian (of Master and Commander fame), stumbled on a copy of Riley's
memoir and decided to produce a thoroughly researched, authoritative
account of Riley's disaster.
Skeletons on the Zahara (Little,
Brown; 353 pages) begins in 1815 when Riley, on his way back from a
routine trading voyage — the proverbial three-hour tour —
got lost near the Canary Islands and ran aground in what is now southern
Morocco. He and his crew suffered horrifying extremes of exposure, hunger
and thirst (King is especially good on the gruesome physiology of dehydration)
and were eventually taken as slaves by the Bou Sbaa, a tribe of nomadic
Arabs who scratched out a perilous living in the Sahara, trading and
feuding and drinking surprising amounts of camel urine. Seen through
Riley's eyes, the Sahara is a nightmare looking-glass world, where camels
are sacred and men wash their faces with sand. It couldn't have been
more alien if he had been captured by Klingons, but Riley manages to
form a kind of friendship with one of his captors, a charismatic merchant
named Sidi Hamet who helps him survive the ordeal.
You can see why Lincoln went
for it. These 19th century naval disasters are satisfying largely in
direct proportion to the suffering of the protagonists, and Riley's
agonies are of truly Shackletonian proportions. But there's richness
in the narrative too. Skeletons on the Zahara (the Z is a 19th century
spelling) is more than a horror story. It's a tale about a man who discovers
his own courage in the face of catastrophe, and an instructive fable
about cultural contact: Americans and Arabs searching for firm common
ground in a wasteland of shifting sands.
-----------------------------------
SAN FRANCISCO CHRONICLE
Sunday, February 22, 2004
Into the fire
A captain and his crew survive a shipwreck only to become slaves in
the African desert
Reviewed by Martin Rubin
No matter how much of a legend
someone is in his own time, sooner or later he may be forgotten. Capt.
James Riley of Connecticut, whose merchant ship Commerce was wrecked
off the northwest coast of Africa in 1815, was definitely such a phenomenon.
After surviving captivity at the hands of Muslim slave traders and enduring
the hardships of a lengthy trek across that most inhospitable of terrains,
the Zahara -- or as we know it today, Sahara -- Desert, he wrote an
account of his experiences that was an international best-seller. Now,
thanks to Dean King, a magazine writer who read this forgotten tome
and became fascinated by the extraordinary saga it contained, Capt.
Riley may become a legend in our time as well.
For King has written a marvelous
account of fortitude and faith, "Skeletons on the Zahara."
He has brought to life not only James Riley but also his crew -- at
least one of whom, Archie Robbins, also wrote a book that was widely
read. In addition, "Skeletons" examines the various desert
folk who enslaved and tormented the sailors and in one case ultimately
saved some of their lives. From the beginning of "Skeletons on
the Zahara," with its memorable description of a failed caravan
traveling south across the desert to Timbuktu in western Africa, the
reader will sense that he is in the hands of a masterly guide:
"When the wind at last
halted and the sand fell to the ground, three hundred men lay dead on
the desert. ... All but two hundred of the camels had been spared. As
the men dug them out, the beasts rose, grunting and snapping madly,
weak-kneed, snorting out the beetlelike parasites that grew in their
nostrils. There were no plants for the camels to eat where they had
stopped, so the men watered and fed them from the dwindling provisions.
For twenty-four more days they racked through deep, hot sand. To keep
the camels from flagging under their loads, they gradually dumped tons
of the salt they carried for trading. ... They found little forage for
the suffering camels, whose humps grew flaccid and sagged. ... Sidi
Ishrel concluded that they had no hope of salvaging the caravan. They
could only try to save themselves, so he ordered all but three hundred
of the best camels to be slaughtered. They would drink their blood and
the fluid stored in their rumens, and they would eat and dry as much
of the meat as they needed."
This is not an author who
needs the far-off to elicit his strengths as a narrator: His evocation
of the Connecticut River -- its landscape, its commerce, its society,
its history, even its trying navigable exigencies -- is as gripping
as that of any exotic locale. Similarly, King has a lovely and vibrant
sense of history: The War of 1812 has never seemed more real to me than
while reading his account of how it was viewed in New England and of
the effects the conflict had had on its economy.
Indeed, King has an unusual
talent for evoking the past -- its essence as well as the smells, sights
and sounds -- while still managing to view it in the light of what we
have come to know in the many decades since. This is evident not only
in his attention to what anthropologists have discovered about the habits
and practices of the Sahara peoples but also in his use of earlier and
later explorer narratives (mostly European) about this area to put Riley
and his crew's experiences in some kind of context.
King is skillful at showing
the travails of the exploiters without in any way indulging in moral
relativism: Their cruelty and cupidity are never explained away or excused,
no matter how harsh their circumstances are revealed to be. It is also
interesting to see the extent to which their religion (Islam, with its
rigid moral codes) is able on occasion, but not always, to mitigate
or soften the cutthroat practices common to their unforgiving environment.
Given the British harassment
of American sailors that Riley had bitterly tasted in the years leading
up to the War of 1812, it is ironic that his eventual salvation should
have come from being ransomed by a British consular official in northern
Africa. Less surprising is that the two men should have become lifelong
friends, and one of the many pleasing features of "Skeletons on
the Zahara" is that it gives the rest of the story for all concerned
where this is known. The fate of three of the Commerce's crew is unknown,
and two sailors, including the first mate, are reliably believed to
have spent the rest of their days enslaved to Saharans. So terrible
was their physical state when last seen alive that despair at their
cruel fate wars with amazement that human beings could survive such
torment.
And the book is full of terrible
descriptions, from the progressive stages of thirst to unimaginable
sunburns and man's inhumanity to man -- to say nothing of women's, who
certainly do not appear in this region as the gentler sex. Yet it is
not at all a depressing book, perhaps because of what it demonstrates
about the power of endurance and also courage. Riley's experiences as
a slave and his observation of the Muslim slave trade in Africa led
him to become an active abolitionist upon his return to his own country,
although he died in 1840 before the United States rid itself of this
shameful blot upon its polity. And since a young Abraham Lincoln was
among the many fans of Riley's book, the captain may even have played
a slight role in bringing about the emancipation of American slaves.
"Skeletons on the Zahara"
is usefully illustrated with many detailed maps that help the reader
follow this picaresque nightmare. King has piled his book high with
details of all sorts, but far from loading it down or making it tedious,
the very accretion of fact upon fact upon fact imbues the book with
nuance and substance. This is one of the most absorbing and satisfying
books to come out in a very long time.
Martin Rubin is a California biographer and critic.
©2004 San Francisco Chronicle
-----------------------------------
THE SAN DIEGO UNION-TRIBUNE
February 22, 2004
SURVIVAL RUN
The Commerce has gone aground, the crew enslaved – 'Skeletons
on the Zahara' is a brutal, true tale
Reviewed by Neal Matthews
By Of the many lessons flowing
from this inspirational retelling of the 1815 shipwreck of the Yankee
merchantman Commerce on the coast of North Africa, the most pertinent
are also the most chilling. The detailed picture of the ways of Islamist
tribal life, albeit from the early 19th century, dovetails with some
of the worst news coming out of the Middle East. Tribal loyalty trumping
the public oaths of Iraqi police officers; the intransigence of Afghan
warlords faced with the mere paper of a new constitution; the brutal
subjugation of Saudi women – it was all well-rooted on the parched
Sahara 200 years ago. Like a car wreck, this book is hard to turn away
from, and you can end up despairing that the West and the Middle East
will ever achieve a meeting of the minds.
A meeting of the hearts is
another matter. I welled up with pride-in-humanity for the valor and
honesty of a few of the Arab traders and sheiks who, though motivated
solely by self-interest, ended up saving half the 12-man Commerce crew,
after an 800-mile forced march across the torturing dunes and thornbush
wastes. The other crewmen were lost forever as slaves to the desert
nomads.
There are two heroes in this
book: 35-year-old James Riley, who captains the Commerce and musters
superhuman effort to keep himself and some of his crew alive through
the worst privations imaginable, and the Arab trader Sidi Hamet, who
buys Riley and delivers him for ransom to a British consul-general,
then dies trying to rescue other members of the crew.
We meet Hamet in the book's
prologue, detailing how his father-in-law, Sheik Ali, takes back Hamet's
wife and children as collateral on a debt Hamet owes him. The origin
of this debt is a gripping tale in itself: Hamet and his brother setting
out on a camel caravan across 1200 miles of the Sahara to Tombouctou,
in which a sandstorm kills 300 men and 1,000 camels, and destroys the
merchandise the father-in-law had fronted the brothers. Later, 200 of
the surviving traders slaughter one another in a bloodbath prompted
by their deranging thirst. The debacle eventually leads Hamet to Riley,
and each becomes the other's salvation.
"Skeletons on the Zahara"
is a sprawling feast, and sometimes, especially early on, writer Dean
King's propensity to follow tangents can be trying for the reader. For
instance, when the Commerce leaves Connecticut and lands first in New
Orleans, we've already been told too much backstory about the Connecticut
shipbuilding industry and the families of the crew. Other, more important
details, are left unexamined. Oddly for a writer who penned a biography
of Patrick O'Brian and a glossary of seamen's terms and phrases as a
companion to O'Brian's series of novels about the early British Navy,
King makes no judgments about several of Capt. Riley's blunders that
bring his seamanship into question, and ultimately lead to the shipwreck.
The first of these is Riley's
failure to notice that strong currents push the brig off course in the
Bahamas, causing it to strike a coral reef in what could have been an
early end to the voyage.
Later, in the Strait of Gibraltar,
what King describes as a "rogue wave" capsizes the brig's
longboat carrying Riley and four crewmen as night falls. They're saved
by the luck of the wind carrying their voices to a rescue ship; the
circumstances are questionable, but King ignores the implications for
Riley as a seaman.
Then, on the way down to
the Cape Verde islands, Riley decides to take a shortcut from the more
conventional (and safer) course, but bad weather and an unusually thick
fog move in, and the captain misinterprets the changing color of the
water. He credits it to clouds, when in fact it's due to the sand blowing
off the African desert. The Commerce is swept to the east by the Canary
Current while Riley thinks he's still passing through the Canary Islands,
and when he hears a roaring sound he interprets it as a squall. In reality
it's the sailors' worst nightmare: pounding surf along the coast of
North Africa. The Commerce hits hard, and is doomed in the breakers.
The seamen had heard all
the stories of what happened when other ships had made the same mistake.
The crews were either murdered by desert nomads (true), or eaten by
cannibals (myth) or beaten into slavery (true). Strangely, when Riley
orders that provisions be brought up from the hold of the stricken ship
and moved to the beach, no firearms are included. Their one chance of
escape is the longboat, which the sailors eventually do use to elude
the first murderous band of nomads they encounter. But the boat is in
such an unseaworthy condition, due to neglect, they nearly die in it.
The longboat's dilapidation has to be laid at Riley's feet, but King
gives him a pass.
It is the crew itself, driven
mad by hunger, that nearly turns cannibalistic. While camped with their
Arab masters, two sailors lure a child away from the tents. "Riley
discovered them and rushed up as they were about to kill him with a
stone," King writes. " 'I convinced them that it would be
more manly to die with hunger than to become cannibals and eat their
own or other human flesh,' " King quotes Riley from the captain's
later writings. A couple of days later, Sidi Hamet arrives with his
brother and purchases Riley and four of his shipmates.
King bases his book largely
on Riley's own account of the wreck and the aftermath, which was published
in 1817, as well as the book of another surviving crewman, Archie Robbins.
King also traveled to the Sahara in 2001 to trace parts of the sailors'
journey, and it shows in the verisimilitude of his physical descriptions.
Though King's reconstruction expands upon Riley's book, the captain's
original telling, available on microform at the UCSD library, has a
you-are-there feel that King could never reproduce. (Riley's narrative
was distributed widely in the early 19th century, and its account of
his metamorphosis into an anti-slavery crusader may have influenced
young Abraham Lincoln.)
The transformation of Riley
from a strapping 240-pound commander into a whimpering 90-pound wretch
is a survival tale right up there with Shackleton's Antarctica heroics
and the Donner Party's snowed-in travails. Quickly, the men are reduced
to drinking their own urine. When they are captured by the nomads, they're
already so pitiful-looking that the Arabs, especially the ululating
women, find them repulsive. They are stripped naked and forced to walk
or ride on camels through radiating heat. Their skin peels off in sheets,
their tongues swell and their feet are lacerated by stones. They are
relieved to be able to drink camel urine. When the desperate captives
stumble into a small encampment one day around noon, "Instead of
sympathy, the spectacle ignited a frenzy of disgust," King writes.
"They reviled the men with shrill curses and spat on them. ...
In a land that imparted good and evil qualities to all things and denounced
women as conduits of evil, any contact with Christians was dangerous."
At the heart of the book
is the complex relationship between Riley and Sidi Hamet. God and family
guide both men's destiny and give them a universal connection, but they
are also bonded in deceit. Riley, who picks up Arabic amazingly fast,
tells the nomads and traders some whoppers: that he and his men are
British (trying to explain they were from another continent across the
ocean was too risky), that he personally knows the Sultan of Morocco
and that he has a friend in the north who will pay Hamet if Riley and
his men are delivered to the sultan's realm.
It's a bluff. Riley knows
nobody in Africa, and he's just trusting to luck that he can get word
to the British consul in the nearest port.
The town of Mogadore, about
700 miles north of the band's wanderings in the trackless Sahara, is
Riley's only hope. Captives could be redeemed there to foreign merchants
and consuls for about $150 each. "To get there," King writes,
"he had to cross the desert past hostile Bedouin tribes, past the
fortified Berber towns of Souss, and finally past the operatives of
the Sultan of Morocco, where Christian slavery was technically illegal
and the sultan was fond of 'gifts' Western nations paid for their rescue."
Hamet agrees to undertake the journey and protect Riley and his mates
along the way, but promises he'll slit Riley's throat with a scimitar
if he is revealed to be lying about having a rich friend named "Consul"
in Mogadore. Riley agrees to the deal.
Running this gauntlet takes
two months, and builds to a pressure-filled climax that depends solely
on trust among strangers, and good men standing by their word. The ending
is given emotional power by the depth of empathy you feel for Hamet,
whose rescue scheme is almost hijacked by his own predacious father-in-law,
the villain we first met in the book's prologue.
The endgame itself is a ripping
yarn, a testament to King's writing, since Hamet has long since proven
himself a true, resourceful survivor and the reader already knows that
the sailors will be saved. Riley and Hamet end up as comrades, their
mutual salvation resounding as a message of hope we sorely need now.
Neal Matthews is a freelance
writer in San Diego.
Skeletons on the
Zahara
A True Story of Survival
Dean King
Little, Brown, 351 pages, $24.95
Excerpt from Skeletons on
the Zahara
Sidi Hamet knew that if his
presence were made known in the town, he would risk being coerced into
selling the Christians to Sheik Beyrouk, the ruler of Wednoon, or to
Sheik Ali, his father-in-law. Thus he decided to bypass Wednoon. In
the late afternoon, he woke the [five] sailors and took them to a nearby
hut, where he had bought a honeycomb. Hassar's hungry men had caught
wind of the meal and loitered around hoping to share in it. Balancing
a bowl containing the hive on his knees, Hamet distributed sections
to the sailors with one hand while holding his gun in the other in case
Hassar's men abandoned their cautious self-restraint. The sailors attacked
their portions like bears, swallowing along with the rich honeycomb
the tender young bees that filled it. Tears rolled down their hollow
faces as they ate the calorie-laden gold. They were so sated that they
fell asleep again under a palm tree until dark.
Ten days after leaving the
Valley of the Locusts, they crossed the St. Cyprian wadi, reaching the
coast just north of Cape Barbas. Robbins had come full circle, in more
ways than one. Neglected by [his master], his health had begun to deteriorate
and would continue to decline over the next month until he hit his lowest
state since arriving on this shore in the longboat. His diet of hard-boiled
blood and locusts made him severely costive. The less he worked, the
more he was shunned. "I was completely dried up; and the skin was
contracted and drawn tightly around my bones," he said. The combination
of his chafing clothes and sleeping on the hardpan had worn the skin
and flesh off his hips so that he could touch his hipbones on both sides.
He was "now literally reduced to a skeleton."
The end, one way or another,
was near.
-----------------------------------
MINNEAPOLIS STAR
Published February 15, 2004
Review: 'Skeletons
on the Zahara' brutally authentic
Emily Carter, Special to
the Star Tribune
In 1815 Capt. James Riley's ship and crew wrecked on the northwest coast
of Africa. After an abortive escape attempt, they were immediately enslaved
by a group of mobile Arab "tradesmen." According to Dean King's
often gripping nonfiction account in "Skeletons on the Zahara,"
conditions were horrific, survival by no means certain.
The only thing the men had
to depend on was the negotiating skill of their captain, a man whose
every business venture had run aground and who had hoped that this expedition
would help him escape his enormous debts. His main captor, a desert
merchant named Sidi Hamet, also was in serious financial trouble: His
previous expedition had ended in disaster, and Hamet was in hock up
to his eyeballs to his powerful and bullying father-in-law. Hamet's
reputation rode on Riley's assurance that he and his men would be purchased
by their important friends at the British consulate.
Riley of course, had no such
friends, and his claim was a desperate gambit, as, perhaps, was Hamet's
assertion that he would have to kill his captives if the purchase price
was not forthcoming. Even getting to the consulate, however, involved
many months and miles crossing the searing desert sands and weathering
beatings, malnourishment and narrow escapes for Riley and his men.
The sailors considered their
captors savage brutes, while the Muslim traders were certain that the
infidel cargo they transported was vile, unclean and less worthy of
respect than swine. It would be an easy shot to say that things haven't
changed much in the cultural-tolerance department, but this was a time
when human beings routinely were bought and sold by both Arabs and the
Western world; we were all savages in those days.
What makes Dean King's account
of this adventure so riveting, is, in fact, not the horrors of captivity
or deprivation suffered by Riley and his men but the two personalities
at the core of the tale: Riley and Hamet. That these two men, failures
in everything they had previously attempted, behaved with integrity
and acumen, ensuring a positive outcome for everyone involved, is truly
a tale of success against all odds.
Unfortunately Riley skirts
the core character issues involved in this harrowing account, giving
more time to documenting the effects of dehydration on the pale skin
of Europeans and the physical attributes of malnourishment. These details,
while ghoulishly riveting, are laid on so thick that the reader becomes
desensitized by the second half of the book. The first 80 or so pages
will be of interest only to nautical-history buffs, involving as they
do endless accounts of longitude, latitude and depth soundings.
Once the ship has wrecked,
though, the narrative takes off. There is a kind of brutal authenticity
to King's factual description both of the traders and their captives
that fastens the reader firmly within place and time.
In the end, however, the
real question of how Riley and Hamet rose to such a difficult occasion,
when neither had shown himself particularly competent, let alone heroic,
is left to the reader's imagination. As gripping a nonfiction account
as this is, one can't help but wonder what a great novel it would have
made.
Emily Carter of Minneapolis
is the author of the short-story collection "Glory Goes and Gets
Some."
-----------------------------------
BACK TO THE EDGE:
IN RESEARCH FOR BOOK, RICHMONDER ENDURES HIS OWN TEST OF SAHARA SANDS
Publication: Richmond Times-Dispatch
Byline: Jann Malone
Date: 02-15-2004
Edition: City
Section: Features
Dean King's defining moment
came inside a fisherman's shack built on the literal edge of the Sahara
Desert, where it drops 200 feet straight down to the Atlantic Ocean.
He was a few days into some
on-site research for " Skeletons on the Zahara," his latest
work of nonfiction. The book, published by Little, Brown and Co., comes
out tomorrow.
King was in Africa to retrace
portions of the route taken in 1815 by one of the skeletons, American
Capt. James Riley, whose ship, the Commerce, crashed onto the rocks
below the same desert. In those days, it was called the Zahara.
Riley and his crew of merchant
seamen, mostly from Connecticut, were
captured and enslaved by nomads. They endured unimaginabsun exposure
incurred on a forced march through the desert.
At one point in his own account
of the experience, Riley observes that he and his crew are wasting away,
becoming " skeletons on the Zahara ." The ordeal cost Riley,
who left Connecticut weighing 240 pounds, half his body weight.
In that same desert in 2001,
things weren't going so well for King and his team of fellow Richmonders,
either, though King would be the first to tell you that their problems
didn't begin to approach the scope of Riley's.
King and his team were in
much better shape because, for one thing, they carried bottled water
for their adventure, which he calls "a Land Rover-assisted camel
trek."
They also had food, clothes,
sunglasses, cell phones, Internet access and global-positioning technology
to tell them their location in a land of shifting sands where maps still
aren't very useful.
And don't forget, they also
had those Land Rovers.
But King, who's 41, also
had a problem. "I'd planned this trip for a year," he said
recently, sipping a mug of hot tea in his home just off Three Chopt
Road. "I'd been working on the book for three years. I'd brought
videographers. I'd brought photographers. I'm on assignment for National
Geographic Adventure magazine. I've set this whole thing up. The
responsibility's on my shoulders.
"I'd come halfway across
the world to retrace this guy's route. I'm determined to experience
what Riley and his men felt, and it's not working out the way I planned
it."
It was, well, too easy.
He wanted to run at Riley's
forced-march speed, but the camels and the guides were operating more
slowly, much the way city time and country time aren't in synch in this
country.
"The camels would only
go so far, so fast. The guides could only do so many miles. Even though
we had run and we were in shape, I had to deal with the reality on the
ground, which was that we would travel a maximum of 30 miles a day using
the camels."
King believed Riley had been
pushed farther and much, much harder.
"I really wanted to
go hard, and I would get mad if we didn't. All along it was, 'We've
got to go faster. You get on the white camel, let's go. I will run.'
"
At one point, sensing his
frustration at the slow pace, one of the guides challenged King to a
foot race. "Here we are running across the desert over stones.
It was mad, foolish, because you can break your ankle easily."
One night, despite all their
high-tech gear, King and his team ended up in the wrong place, in that
oceanside fishing village instead of the spot where the guides had set
up their base camp for the night.
Eventually, the base camp
sent out trucks and found them. "My guys all loaded into the truck
and went back, but I stayed out overnight with my guides and the camels,
because I wanted to experience that.
"I'm thinking we're
going to ride overnight and get the camels to camp, and then we'll keep
going."
Instead, when they reach
the fishing shack at desert's edge, one of the guides tells King he
knows the man who lives there. He wants to stop and visit. King can't
believe it. "But, for some reason, I didn't argue. I just said
to myself, OK, they've had a long day. Let's just stop.
"We go in, and we're
sitting with this guy. He, of course, makes us tea and shares his bread.
He lives in a shack that's probably 10- by-10 clapboard and is literally
on the edge. He fishes out of his back window and reels big fish all
the way up 200 feet.
"It was at that point,
sharing the conversation, sharing the food, that I realized I had to
do what they wanted to do. I had my own little transcendental moment,
where, like Riley, I had to realize that things weren't going to happen
the way I wanted them to, no matter what I did or how hard I tried.
I realized I needed to abandon some of my preconceptions
and go along with what was happening."
King didn't see the parallel
at the time. "I didn't have that kind of distance on it."
He would encounter other
parallels, too, experiences that would make " Skeletons on the
Zahara " a much better read.
The book tells Riley's story,
not King's. The piece King wrote for the February issue of National
Geographic Adventure weaves details of his own trip into an excerpt
from the book.
But even though King's story
isn't part of " Skeletons ," he was able to describe what
happened in 1815 in details made more vivid by his own experiences in
the desert.
King, also the author of
"Patrick O'Brian: A Life Revealed," a biography of the maritime
novelist, discovered Riley's story in the library of the New York Yacht
Club. He was doing research for one of his books that explain the language
and geography of O'Brian's works.
"I was just looking
on a shelf one day, and I saw on the spine the words 'Sufferings in
Africa.' I cracked it open and started reading. A lot of this old stuff
is very stilted and almost silly and hard to believe. Here's a guy speaking
from 1815 who still speaks today in a way that's convincing and meaningful,
and he tells a good story, too. I realized that this voice was really
working for me.
"I read for about an
hour, then I came back the next day and read the whole thing. It was
very powerful and I became fascinated by it."
Before long, he'd written
a proposal and signed a $750,000 contract with Little, Brown for the
project.
Riley's story was riveting,
but King still felt the need to retrace his steps. That's because writers
in Riley's day didn't provide a lot of details, especially the sensory
impressions we're used to reading today. He also wanted to do firsthand
fact checking to verify what he'd read in Riley's memoir.
The trip almost didn't happen.
Scheduled to leave Richmond
the week after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, King believed he'd have
to postpone it until his Moroccan outfitter told him, "We can do
it. I've got the camels ready."
King landed in Casablanca
the day the United States started bombing Afghanistan.
Also on the team from Richmond
were school friend and neighbor Ted Lawrence and his wife, Claudia D'Andrea,
and J.P. Kang. Lawrence and D'Andrea had been living in East Timor,
where he was doing peacekeeping work and she was finishing a doctorate
in Third World studies. Kang was the technology wizard in the group.
Remi Benali, the National
Geographic photographer, came from France. Two kinds of guides, local
and outfitter provided, completed the group.
The trip cost about $20,000,
by King's estimate. National Geographic Adventure paid part of the cost,
and the rest came from King's advance from his publisher.
King and his team flew from
Casablanca to Western Sahara, a disputed territory now controlled by
Morocco. There, he found his plans to follow Riley's route thwarted
at just about every step by nervous military police.
"I think they were actually
worried that something might happen to us. It was such a tense time,
if something were to happen to Americans in a Muslim country.
"You know, the fact
that I didn't get to closely re-create the route was disappointing at
first, but I realized I was absorbing so much. My conversations with
the guides were so informative that I was satisfied with what I learned."
For instance, from guide
Mohammed el Arab, communicating in a mixture of Spanish, Arabic and
French, King learned what to expect from encounters in the desert.
Today, as in Riley's day,
"What they want to find out is this: Is there salt ahead? Is there
sugar ahead? Did you see bandits? Did you see friends? I came to realize
that when you're in the desert, it's more a matter of finding friends
than avoiding enemies."
Riley wrote about the willingness
of nomads who had almost nothing to share what little they had with
strangers. "That was so graphically portrayed on my own trip,"
King said.
They were eating lunch when
they saw a man walk over the horizon. "It was like we were a magnet
and he was a metal ball. He came in, our guides didn't know him, but
they hugged and they were laughing. There was never any question whether
he would share a meal. It was just part of their hospitality, the way
things are done in the desert."
When King's boat trip on
the ocean was scuttled by the military police, he stood on a bluff over
the ocean, where he could smell the sea and hear the breakers crashing
onto the rocky shore below.
Then, clinging to a rope
some fishermen had staked to the top of the cliff, he went right over
the edge.
"When our guide did
that, I thought he was insane. The next thing you know, we're all bounding
down the bluff. We're off the face of Africa, between Africa and the
sea."
Oh. And don't forget what
King calls "the brutality of riding a camel."
Riley's description of what
riding camels did to his and his crewmen's bodies is gruesome. Says
King: "They really rip up your backside. They bounced so hard,
we'd have to take water bottles and stuff them under our straw saddles
to keep from bouncing off the back."
Still, "you come to
rely on your camel. You come to love your camel. You begin to understand
the bond: Their camel is their transportation. It's their home. Their
camel is their greatest symbol of wealth. Their camel is their food.
They drink the camel milk, and if the camel is lamed or grows old, they
slaughter and eat it."
Even a trip as challenging
as King's included some lighter, time- warp moments. One night, while
he stayed out in the desert with the guides and looked for a camel crossing,
the rest of the crew drove into town. Kang went into an Internet cafe.
"He started e-mailing
and found out my wife was online. So they instant-messaged between Richmond
and the Sahara, while I was out looking for a camel crossing in the
wadi. I thought that was a great combination of events."
King's wife, Jessica, explained
later just how amazing that connection was:
"I almost never went
online, but I was online that night."
Now, comfortably settled
in the newly renovated house he grew up in, surrounded by Jessica and
his four daughters, King has forgotten the military interference, the
too-slow pace and, especially, the way the camel rides rubbed him raw.
He's ready to go back.
Just outside Laayoune, the
biggest town in Western Sahara, he saw people sitting out on the desert
on blankets, the way we take picnics to the park. Why? "The guides
said, 'Well, they love the sand, they miss the sand, they come out of
the towns and into the sand.'
"I can understand that.
I think a lot of people have felt the tug of the desert and want to
go back. I definitely feel that.
"I do a lot of cross-country
walking, and I enjoy the fact that you're carrying everything you need,
and that you're moving on your own feet.
"There are special challenges
and a special aesthetic to the desert, but there's an appeal to the
quiet, the loneliness, the stillness."
And there are those transcendental
moments. "I generally find those when I do a cross-country walk.
There's always a part of the trip where you wonder, 'Why the heck am
I doing this? I can't believe I've done this three times before and
I swear every time that I'll never do it again.'
"You're in pain, you're
suffering, and then something happens psychologically, mentally, physically.
You adapt, and all of a sudden you're on a high, and you're enjoying
it and you realize this is what it's all about. You leave with that
great feeling, the desire to go, to travel again.
"Maybe, in a way, this
is where it happened here."
-----------------------------------
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Starred Review
* When the
American cargo ship Commerce ran aground on the shores of Africa in
1815 along with its crew of 12 Connecticut-based sailors, the misfortunes
that befell them came fast and hard, from enslavement to reality-bending
bouts of dehydration. King’s aggressively researched account of
the crew’s once-famous ordeal reads like historical fiction, with
unbelievable stories of the seamen’s endurance of heat stroke,
starvation and cruelty by their Saharan slavers. King (Patrick O’Brian:
A Life Revealed), who went to Africa and, on camel and foot, retraced
parts of the sailors’ journey, succeeds brilliantly at making
the now familiar sandscape seem as imposing and new as it must have
been to the sailors. Every dromedary step thuds out from the pages with
its punishing awkwardness, and each drop of brackish found water reprieves
and tortures with its perpetual insufficiency. King’ leisurely
prose style rounds out the drama with well-parceled-out bits of context,
such as the haggling barter culture of the Saharan nomadic Arabs and
the geological history of western Africa’s coastline. Zahara (King’s
use of older and/or phonetic spellings helps evoke the foreignness of
the time and place) impresses with its pacing, thoroughness and empathy
for the plight of a dozen sailors heaved smack hard into an unknown
tribalism. By the time the surviving crew members make it back to their
side of civilization, reader and protagonist alike are challenged by
new ways of understanding culture clash, slavery and the place of Islam
in the social fabric of desert-dwelling peoples. Maps, illus. (Feb.
16)
Forecast:
A major media campaign, including ads in the New York Time Book Review,
USA Today and Time; radio and TV interviews; and a six city author tour
will ignite interest in this captivating adventure tale. The book has
earned advance praise from Nathaniel Philbrick (In the Heart of the
Sea) and Doug Stanton (In Harm’s Way).
-----------------------------------
From "Expeditions
from Hell," by Jonathan Miles, Men's Journal, February 2004,
p. 38
“As with barbecued rib seasonings, this month's best adventures
come in two varieties: wet and dry. Dean King's Skeletons...is the latter,
and reader beware: This account of 12 Americans shipwrecked in North
Africa in 1815, enslaved by nomads, and then hauled along on a Dantean
odyssey through the desert, is scalding enough to induce vicarious dehydration.”
-----------------------------------
LIBRARY JOURNAL
February 2004
In 1815, 12 men boarded the merchant ship Commerce in Connecticut, bound
for the Cape Verde Islands after a brief stopover in Gibraltar. Weather
and unfamiliar surroundings, however, caused the ship to wreck on the
inhospitable coast of what is now Mauritania. Taken as slaves by regional
nomads and separated (some never to be seen again), the dozen sailors
endured great hardships. King (Patrick O'Brian: A Life Revealed) rivets
with this account of Captain Riley's nine weeks of captivity: traveling
inland nearly 800 miles, then back west, and finally north to Morocco,
where he was luckily ransomed by an American consul. Referencing Riley's
journals and those of crewman Robbin (which became best sellers in their
day), King writes an astoundingly researched treatise on Islamic customs,
nomadic life, and desert natural history, as well as detailed descriptions
of dehydration, starvation, and caloric intake. Included are an 85-title
bibliography, detailed maps of the northwest coast of Mauritania and
Morocco, a glossary of Arabic terms, and wonderful photographs of King's
own trip as he retraced Captain Riley's journey of enslavement. A wonderful,
inspiring story of humankind's will to survive in spite of inhospitable
conditions and inhumane treatment, this work should be in all public
libraries, maritime libraries, and African collections. [Previewed in
Prepub Alert, LJ 10/15/03.]-Jim Thorsen, Weaverville, NC
Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
——————————————————
Jennie
Shortridge
Riding with the
Queen
ISBN: 0-451-21027-1
Author: Jennie Shortridge
Published by NAL Accent, a division of Penguin Group (USA)
Trade Paperback Original, 352 pages
$12.95 US / $19.50 CAN
———————————
“Riding with the Queen
is a poignant, riveting adventure full of moments that are touching
and insightful, but never predictable. Tallie is a fresh, unique character
whom I couldn't stop rooting for!” -- Caren Lissner, Author of
Carrie Pilby
-----------------------------------
“This skillfully written
novel is gripping from the get-go. Tenderly and without ever blinking,
Jennie Shortridge evokes the psychic damage of childhood--and the will
to survive. A life-affirming must-read.” -- Caroline Hwang, Author
of In Full Bloom
-----------------------------------
“Witty, engaging, Jennie
Shortridge writes with an easy grace and a backbeat of the blues that
lends a quiet authority to this novel of a woman trying to stay halfway
sane in a wholly crazy world. Plenty of books can take you there; this
one will bring you home. Keep an eye on this writer.” -- Summer
Wood, Author of Arroyo
-----------------------------------
“Like the novel she
inhabits, Tallie Beck is funny, sexy, smart, and heartbreakingly real.
A wonderful debut.” -- Louise Redd, Author of Hangover Soup
and Playing the Bones
-----------------------------------
“A kick-in-the-pants
read. Tallie Beck is as brassy a blues singer as you'd ever want to
meet.” -- Katie Schneider, Author of All We Know of Love
——————————————————
Alan
Cutler, Ph.D.
THE SEASHELL
ON THE MOUNTAINTOP: A Story of Science, Sainthood, and the Humble Genius
who Discovered a New History of the Earth
ISBN: 0525947086
Author: Alan Cutler, Ph.D.
Publisher: E P Dutton; (April 14, 2003)
Hardcover: 240 pages
———————————
“An excellent introduction
to his [Steno's] life and work... Cutler's rich and thought-provoking
book should prove the starting point for more rounded studies... A well-written,
much-needed account of Steno's life which will bring his name to a far
wider audience than geology students, devout Danish Catholics and historians
of science.” -- Times Literary Supplement
-----------------------------------
“Alan Cutler's account
of Steno's life is more than just a history lesson; it is a fascinating
account of the struggles and triumphs of an incredible genius involving
some of the greatest scientific names that have ever lived.” --
Business Times (Singapore)
-----------------------------------
“Cutler’s smart
and readable biography puts Steno right at the forefront of the geographical
revolution. Clearly, he had joined the pantheon of science long before
the church beatified him in 1988, officially setting him on the road
to sainthood.” -- Natural History
-----------------------------------
“...what is so intriguing
about this little book is the way it makes you wrestle with the unwillingness
shown by people, however intelligent, to accept the evidence of their
own eyes.” -- Daily Mail
-----------------------------------
“Alan Cutler fluidly
and elegantly charts the birthing pains of geology... In a beautifully
written, slim book, Cutler has not only sketched a portrait of a man
who is not as widely known as he deserves, but has painted a fascinating
tableau of a philosophically complex period.” -- Daily Telegraph
-----------------------------------
“Alan Cutler's biography
of Steno is insightful, entertaining and beautifully produced. It is
written with a grace that will delight anyone with even a passing interest
in the story of how we came to understand the inner workings of the
Earth.” -- Sunday Telegraph
——————————————————
Doris
A. Fuller & Natalie Fuller
Promise You Won't
Freak Out: A Teenager Tells Her Mother the Truth About Boys, Booze,
Body Piercing, and Other Touchy Topics (And Mom Responds)
ISBN: 0425195910
Authors: Doris A. Fuller & Natalie Fuller with Greg Fuller
Publisher: Berkley
Publishing Group (May 1, 2004)
Paperback: 237 pages
———————————
November 2004
Amazon.com picks #1 Best
Parenting Book of 2004 Promise You Won't Freak Out by
Doris A. Fuller & Natalie Fuller
——————————————————