The immeasurable world Journeys in desert places

William Atkins

Book - 2018

"In the classic literary tradition of Bruce Chatwin and Geoff Dyer, a rich and exquisitely written account of travels in six deserts on five continents that evoke the timeless allure of these remote and forbidding places. One-sixth of the earth's surface is classified as desert. Restless, unhappy in love, and intrigued by the Desert Fathers who forged Christian monasticism in the Egyptian desert, Will Atkins decided to travel in six of the world's driest, hottest places: the Empty Quarter of Oman, the Gobi Desert of North China, the Great Victoria Desert of Australia, the man-made desert of the Aral Sea in Kazkahstan, the Black Rock and Sonoran Deserts of the American Southwest, and the Sinai Desert of Egypt. Each of his trav...el narratives effortlessly weaves aspects of natural history, historical background, and present-day reportage into a compelling tapestry that reveals the human appeal of these often inhuman landscapes"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Published
New York : Doubleday [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
William Atkins (author)
Edition
First United States edition
Physical Description
352 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780385539883
  • Prologue
  • 1. The Desert Library: The Empty Quarter, Oman
  • 2. Field Of Thunder: The Great Victoria Desert, Australia
  • 3. Troublemakers: The Gobi Desert and the Taklamakan Desert, China
  • 4. Bastard Sturgeon: The Aralkum, Kazakhstan
  • 5. Between Great Fires: The Sonoran Desert, USA
  • 6. Matter Out Of Place: The Black Rock Desert, USA
  • 7. The Inner Mountain: The Eastern Desert, Egypt
  • Acknowledgements
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Former British publishing executive Atkins' richly written account of his travels across deserts around the world brings Bruce Chatwin to mind, along with others who, like Atkins, have explored and have an affinity for the solitude and vast expanse of the Earth's empty places, such as Wallace Stegner, Gretel Ehrlich, and Sara Wheeler. Like theirs, Atkins' prose is gorgeous, but he can also be cantankerous as he explores eight deserts on five continents: the Empty Quarter of Oman, the Gobi and Taklamakan Deserts of China, the Great Victoria Desert of Australia, the man-made desert of the Aral Sea in Kazakhstan, the Black Rock and Sonoran Deserts of the American Southwest, and the Eastern Desert of Egypt. He also evokes the spirit of earlier desert travelers, including St. Anthony, T. E. Lawrence, and John Wesley Powell. Atkins is mesmerized by the silence of the desert while being drawn to what he refers to as its essential lawlessness. The desert, he suggests, is a place where norms are suspended. The chapter on the Burning Man festival in Nevada captures the essence of the desert as both a permissive space and a refuge. With a fine desert bibliography, Atkins' book of journeys will be a modern-day classic.--June Sawyers Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

British author Atkins takes readers on a thoroughly enjoyable tour of the world's deserts. After a breakup with his girlfriend of four years and a week spent with Cistercian monks in southwest England, Atkins (The Moor) became obsessed with deserts. His fascination began when he read, in the monastery's well-stocked library, accounts of desert explorers and he soon became consumed with the desire to "stand in the desert... and imagine what it might to do to a person who abandoned himself to it." And so began an odyssey that took Atkins to eight deserts across the globe: the Empty Quarter in Oman, the Gobi and Taklamakan in China, Australia's Great Victoria, the Aral Sea area in Kazakhstan, the Black Rock and Sonoran in the U.S., and Egypt's Eastern Desert. Interspersed with his own adventures are tales of those who have gone before him, such as Christian missionary Mildred Cable, who traveled the Gobi desert at the turn of the 20th century. Atkins also takes a contemporary look at deserts, describing, for example, the setting of the Burning Man festival in Nevada's Black Rock Desert. Atkins infuses his travel writing with poetic prose (he describes the Great Australian Bight as "a callused web of skin between two digits") to describe the beauty of what many consider to be wastelands. Atkins's thoughtful book is a wonderfully satisfying travelogues. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In the mid-2010s, Atkins (The Moor) decided to travel to the least hospitable parts of the globe, what early polar explorers called "the zone of maximum inaccessibility." The outcome is a fascinating look at seven deserts-in Oman, Australia, China, Kazakhstan, the United States, and Egypt-in a study that tells us as much about humans as the desert. Oman's Empty Quarter only gets two-fifths of an inch of rainfall yearly. Once a year at the Burning Man Festival in Black Rock, AZ, you can take part in a dildo toss. The Kazakhstani still hope to revive their fishing industry, destroyed when the Aral Sea, once the fourth-largest inland sea in the world, shrank from 26,000 to 2.6 square miles in 30 years. In the Great Victoria Desert, aboriginal people wander through nuclear "hot" zones. The desert is neither quiet nor still. Ever-restless winds redistribute the sand daily. In the Sonoran Desert, cicadas sing. Everywhere there are ravens or vultures, the constant susurrus of wind. VERDICT The subject is riveting, the gorgeous prose reminiscent of nature observers from Thoreau to Leopold. Lovers of good descriptive writing will eat up this book.-David Keymer, Cleveland © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A wide-ranging travelogue, covering eight deserts, interspersed with historical accounts of desert geography and travel.Making up one-sixth of our planet's land, deserts have fascinated writers since the dawn of Christianity, a group that includes Atkins (The Moor: A Journey into the English Wilderness, 2014), the former editorial director of Pan Macmillan UK. A lucid observer, the author chronicles his travels through the world's most arid lands, ruminating on their history, natural history, ongoing conditions, and mostly discouraging future. Viewing the world through British eyes, he makes a beeline for the first of his eight deserts, the great Empty Quarter of Saudi Arabia and Oman, a destination of the author's most flamboyant countrymen, from T.E. Lawrence to Harry St. John Philby, whose paths he has tried to follow. Next up is Australia's Great Victorian Desert, still partly off-limits as a result of 1950s British nuclear tests and home to a large Indigenous population ejected from their lands to accommodate the tests. No one was ejected from the Kyzylkum Desert in central Asia, but the population was impoverished as Soviet irrigation emptied the Aral Sea. American readers will enjoy the absence of depressing news from Nevada's Black Rock Desert, and they will also find an account of the nostalgic wackiness of the Burning Man festival. In the Great Sonoran Desert to the southwest, thousands of migrants have died trying to reach the United States. Atkins describes activists who set out water and provisions deep in the desert and the vigilantes and Border Patrol agents who destroy them. Each section begins with a detailed map to help situate readers in the region. The book doesn't contain an underlying theme, and Atkins learns most of his history and science from books, but he has an acute eye and delivers unrelated but satisfying journalistic accounts of the world's hottest, driest regions. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Prologue It was the night of the blood moon. The term was coined by Bible Belt millenarians who believed the phenomenon--a lunar eclipse when the full moon is at its perigee, therefore magnified and pink--portended Armageddon. Joel 2:31: "The sun shall be turned to darkness and the moon to blood before the great and dreadful day of the Lord comes." The timing was just good fortune but it turned out I'd have among the best views on earth. In my ignorance it was its redness I anticipated as much as its bigness or for that matter the fact that it would be eclipsed, and so when it rose into view, more embers than blood, I was disappointed--as disappointed as one can ever be by a new-risen full moon. By the time I'd rehydrated my noodles and poured my daily half-beaker of wine, the moon had returned from grey-pink to its customary white, like a fingertip pressed against glass, and every cactus and every shrub, and the strawbale cabin, had generated a hard exclusive shadow. It seemed to me that the chief characteristic of night in the desert was not darkness but this light that was not the sun's. *** The cabin stands on a ridge above the San Pedro River sixty kilometres east of Tucson, Arizona. It is a one-room structure about three metres by five, with a door facing north-east. In each of the other three walls is a single window, screened with mesh against insects. It's nice to open the windows to the evening breeze, but during the day they stay shut to keep out the heat. The interior walls are thickly plastered, bumpy and cracked. The floor is packed earth laid with two rugs heavily nibbled by mice. Furniture: a cabinet for cooking utensils, a folding steel cot and mattress, a pine table and matching chairs, and an iron-banded trunk a century old, containing Mexican blankets, batteries and a first-aid kit and dozens of candles. The table resembles an altar. On it, most of the time, stands a storm lantern and a bottle of screw-top Cabernet Merlot ($8.99, Trader Joe's). Each of the four windows (there's one in the door) gives onto a hillside thick with mesquite, paloverde, creosote bush, ocotillo, prickly pear, barrel cactus, and saguaro, the region's characteristic cactus, the cactus of cowboy films. It is the saguaros' giant candelabra forms that break the line of each hillside and provide landmarks. The tallest for kilometres stands beside the cabin. From the south-west-facing window you can see the Rincon Mountains, with the Little Rincons before them, dropping down to the San Pedro Valley, and the few dwellings of the Cascabel community ten kilometres away. When the sun rises behind me, a blade of light drops from the distant peaks of the Rincons, down the foothills and towards me across the alluvial plain, until slowly, like a lava flow, the threshold where light meets shadow approaches the cabin--and then: there! The warmth as the sun's rays touch the back of my head and my shadow is thrown down long before me. From a hook fixed to a rafter-end I hang a kettle of water on a bungee each morning, and by 6 p.m. it is hot enough for a shower. On the cabin's opposite side, where there is more shade, lies the two-hundred-litre drum that provides all my water, raised on a bed of rocks and protected against the sun with a jacket of wire-strung saguaro ribs. The ridge separates two washes (dry, except after cloudbursts): one is broad and shallow, the other is deep and narrow and what they call an arroyo. The ridge rises to the north-east--halfway up this hill, about thirty metres from my door, is a double wooden frame into which two identical square boards are slid, each painted white on one side and on the other red. Every evening, before my shower, though I don't always remember, I walk up the hill along a path marked out with rocks on each side, and slide out the boards, flip them over, and slide them back into the framework. From the ridge near his home down near the San Pedro, my friend Daniel checks each morning with his binoculars, if he remembers; if the boards do not change for a day or two, he'll come and make sure I'm okay. There are a few books here: a natural history of the Sonoran Desert and a book about the dangerous animals of the region, every one hair-triggered, you'd be forgiven for inferring, to sting you, bite you, maul you, or char you with its fiery breath. My own contribution is a paperback facsimile of John C. Van Dyke's 1901 book The Desert . It describes a man's journey, alone, into this desert, the Sonoran, a journey made chiefly in 1898, though its precise course is unclear. He was an accomplished art historian, but trust Van Dyke's guidance at your peril. Here he is, homicidally, on the subject of food and water, for instance: "Any athlete or Indian will tell you that you can travel better without them. They are good things at the end of the trip but not at the beginning." Rattlesnakes he describes as "sluggish." He shoots grey wolves in California, where there were no wolves, and eulogises the purple flowers of the saguaro, which are white (though the fruits are red). Alerted to certain errors by a well-meaning desert ecologist, he graciously acknowledged the mistakes, promised to correct them in future editions-- The Desert had a long life--and so far as is known made no effort to do so. A note appended to the manuscript of his autobiography spells out his aim: "to describe the desert from an aesthetic, not scientific, point of view." I no longer sleep inside but, after my sunset shower, drag the cot out to the clearing in front of the door, where I am not disturbed by the lizards in the roof--or, more accurately, where the noise they make is subsumed by the larger racket of the desert at night. I lift each of the bed's feet and slip containers of water under them--tin mugs, a wooden saucer, a saucepan--to keep conenose kissing-bugs or scorpions from joining me. I position the two chairs beside the bed, one at the foot, one alongside my head, and stand lanterns on them. In a row on the ground between them half a dozen candles are stationed. In the mornings the hardened wells around their wicks are black with flying insects. Within this lit perimeter I sleep more easily than I have for months, which is not to say deeply. Waking in the night to the buzzing of cicadas or the yapping of coyotes, I experience a weight of tranquillity that has the quality of a quilt. It might be the peace of the dying. Most afternoons, as the warmth first intensifies like an oven preheating, then levels off at a temperature that permits nothing but sitting in the cabin's shadow cowled in a wet scarf, I try to remember how the song goes: High on a hill was a lonely goatherd . . . One little girl in a pale pink coat heard . . . This is my main afternoon work: to remember the words. And day by day, one by one, they return to me, though it's a year since I last heard the song, coming from a cracked Samsung smartphone on the edge of the Worst Desert on Earth, while to the north a massacre was happening. 1. The Desert Library The Empty Quarter, Oman It seems a long time ago. The woman I'd lived with for four years had taken a job overseas. I would not be going with her. The summer before, in the name of research, I'd spent a week with a community of Cistercian monks on the edge of Dartmoor in south-west England. I attended each of the abbey's sacred offices--matins at 5:45 a.m., lauds an hour later, Mass at 8 a.m., vespers at 6 p.m., compline at 9--and took meals in the vaulted refectory. As the days passed, each office became indistinguishable from the next. I'd sit at the high open window of my room, looking out from time to time to follow the swallows as they spiralled over the cloister roof. When the bell tolled, I would put down whatever book I was reading, and go alone down the long stone staircase, three flights, and wait in the chapel for the twelve monks to enter, one by one, and take their places along the walls on either side. I stood at the back and listened to their plainsong. It was in the monastery library that I became aware of the connection between Christian monasticism and the desert. I would make a pile of books and carry them up to my small room, and spend the time between offices reading. I learned about the Desert Fathers, the third-and fourth-century solitaries of Upper Egypt, and the first of them, St. Antony. Antony was born in AD 251 in Upper Egypt, the son of a wealthy Christian family. At the age of nineteen, following the deaths of his parents, he happened to pass a church and hear the words of Matthew 19:21: "If you would be perfect, go and sell that you have and give to the poor." Antony obeyed and put his younger sister in a nunnery. To give up your possessions, to remove from your life those you love: these are a monk's first acts, but they might also be described as consistent with grieving. Artistic depictions of St. Antony--"the Star of the Desert"--fall into two categories, each illustrating a central scene in the saint's life: the first shows him in his nineties meeting the dying St. Paul, having walked fifty kilometres from his cave on the other side of Egypt's South Galala Mountains. It is this scene that Velázquez's St. Antony Abbot and St. Paul the Hermit depicts: the dying saint, his beard whiter than his companion's, sits on a rocky outcrop, hands fused in prayer, while Antony looks on in awe. Just above their heads a raven descends with a loaf of bread. The bird appears in every image of St. Antony and St. Paul, and its presence alone identifies the human figures. The other scenario in which St. Antony is depicted shows an early, more tumultuous period in his life and is much more common on account of its imaginative potency. Having left his home, the young man retired alone to a hut in the desert--but it wasn't far, hardly the true desert at all, just a place outside the village walls. There he was besieged by the devil's temptations: memories of his former comforts, his abandoned sister, the promise of money and glory, and above all the "spirit of fornication." Hieronymus Bosch's triptych of c. 1500 depicts an army of grotesques crowding its central panel; in the left-hand panel the saint is being rendered away by a squadron of airborne frog-demons; in the right he sits reading, trying to ignore the nude sylph half-concealed in the bole of a dead tree. He travels still further into the desert, deeper into the devil's domain, like a military scout preceding an invasion. At Pispir, close to the eastern bank of the Nile, he takes up residence in an abandoned fort. When, in Athanasius's account, his friends visit with bread they hear wrestling and yelling from within: "Go from what is ours! What do you even in the desert?" But when he emerges, Antony is "neither fat, like a man without exercise, nor lean from fasting and striving with demons, but . . . just the same." By now he has become an iconic figure and must fend off acolytes as well as demons. He travels deeper still into the desert, until he reaches the place that would be his home for the rest of his life: the foothills of the South Galala Mountains. This story of a step-by-step progression into oblivion, from the lush Nile floodplain to the arid interior, became a model for others wishing to renounce society. According to St. Athanasius, "cells filled with holy bands of men who said psalms, loved reading, fasted, prayed, rejoiced in the hope of things to come, laboured in almsgiving and preserved love and harmony one with the other." These communities in turn inspired the establishment of Benedictine and Cistercian monasteries in Europe. *** I started accumulating a library of desert travelogues, mostly by nineteenth-and early-twentieth-century travellers. I read them without system or coherence, least of all geographical. I was impelled by a sort of urgency, as if ransacking their pages for the code to deactivate a bomb. Sometimes I'd resort to Deuteronomy: He found him in a desert land, and in the waste howling wilderness. T. E. Lawrence--Lawrence of Arabia--was quoted so ubiquitously that it was barely necessary to own a copy of his first-hand account of the Arab revolt, Seven Pillars of Wisdom . But his fellow Arabists--Charles Doughty, Harry St. John Philby, Wilfred Thesiger, and especially Bertram Thomas--joined the heap. A single book, one voice alone, was insufficient to hold my attention for long. It was a modern disease. I'd wake up in bed or on the sofa, ringed by half a dozen old books, each splayed face-down at the point where I'd moved on or nodded off, primed for the next round. As bedfellows went, they were a shabby, irascible, not-always-likeable bunch. Even among the women, the metaphor of sexual conquest was near-ubiquitous: time and again the feminised desert was unveiled, exposed, vanquished and finally penetrated. My bedding was dusty with dried binding-glue. It was in this way that I came to think of all these accounts as a single narrative: the deserts of the world as one. It wasn't an unprecedented approach. In his translation of The Arabian Nights , I found a footnote by Richard Burton reporting that the "Desert Quarter" in the original Arabic was given as "Rub'a al-Kharáb," which he believed alluded to "the Rub' al-Khali or Great Arabian Desert." In rhetoric, Burton explains, "it is opposed to the 'Rub'a Maskún', or populated fourth of the world, the rest being held to be ocean." Charles Doughty, in the Old Testament prose of his 1888 Travels in Arabia Deserta , writes that, in Arabic lore, "two quarters [of the world] divided God to the children of Adam, the third he gave to Ajuj and Majuj (Gog and Magog), the fourth part of the world is called Rub'a el-Khaly, the Empty Quarter." I had to remind myself that "the desert" was more than a metaphor. For geographers, deserts are simply places where the average annual rainfall is less than 250 millimetres, and where precipitation, by rain or fog or dew, is exceeded by potential evapotranspiration (loss of water through evaporation and the transpiration of plants). The Aridity Index gauges this ratio as P/PET and this formula is used internationally to define the four categories of "drylands": Hyper-Arid, Arid, Semi-Arid, and Sub-Humid. Collectively these areas make up more than 40 per cent of the world's surface. The model desert journey is a progression from the sub-humid to the hyper-arid--from the Nile to the "Inner Mountain," as the South Galala Mountains were known to the Desert Fathers--and it was this centripetal tendency that interested me. French travellers in the Sahara in the nineteenth century sought what they called le désert absolu . In the Vitae Patrum , the collected sayings and biographies of the Desert Fathers, published in the seventeenth century, we learn of the paneremos (Gr.): at once the place of uttermost lifelessness, and the locus where the desert's identity was most purely asserted, and that point furthest from the periphery. Polar explorers have another term: the Pole of Maximum Inaccessibility. This it seemed was the ultimate objective of every desert traveller: the axis where the absolute coexists with the infinite. Excerpted from The Immeasurable World: Journeys in Desert Places by William Atkins All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.