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Shifting Sands by Judith Scheele

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Shifting Sands

A Human History of the Sahara

Judith Scheele

Basic Books · Print & ebook · June 3, 2025

Reading lane: African History

A “detailed, often gritty, picture of a fragile world” ( The Wall Street Journal ) that tells the history of the Sahara from prehistory to the present, showing how Saharans have navigated scarcity, conquest, and the relentless challenges of the desert environment What comes to mind when we think about the Sahara?

At a Glance

Why This Clicks

Desert, Reframed

Accessible history with an edge, for reading the Sahara as lived and argued over.

Come here for

  • A human-scale view of the Sahara
  • Clear cultural context without fog

Expect

  • Insight first, trivia second
  • A sustained, explanatory read

Book Details

Authors
Judith Scheele
Publisher
Basic Books
Published
June 3, 2025
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
African History · Middle Eastern History
Reading lane
African History

Affinity

Publisher Categories

  • African History

  • Middle Eastern History

  • World History

  • Regional Studies

About This Book

A “detailed, often gritty, picture of a fragile world” ( The Wall Street Journal ) that tells the history of the Sahara from prehistory to the present, showing how Saharans have navigated scarcity, conquest, and the relentless challenges of the desert environment What comes to mind when we think about the Sahara? Rippling sand dunes, sun-blasted expanses, camel drivers and their caravans perhaps. Or famine, climate change, civil war, desperate migrants stuck in a hostile env...

Read full description

A “detailed, often gritty, picture of a fragile world” ( The Wall Street Journal ) that tells the history of the Sahara from prehistory to the present, showing how Saharans have navigated scarcity, conquest, and the relentless challenges of the desert environment What comes to mind when we think about the Sahara? Rippling sand dunes, sun-blasted expanses, camel drivers and their caravans perhaps. Or famine, climate change, civil war, desperate migrants stuck in a hostile environment. The Sahara stretches across 3.2 million square miles, hosting several million inhabitants and a corresponding variety of languages, cultures, and livelihoods. But beyond ready-made images of exoticism and squalor, we know surprisingly little about its history and the people who call it home. Shifting Sands is about that other Sahara, not the empty wasteland of the romantic imagination but the vast and highly differentiated space in which Saharan peoples and, increasingly, new arrivals from other parts of Africa live, work, and move. It takes us from the ancient Roman Empire through the bloody colonial era to the geopolitics of the present, questioning easy clichés and exposing fascinating truths along the way. From the geology of the region to the religions, languages, and cultural and political forces that shape and fracture it, this landmark book tells the compelling story of a place that sits at the heart of our world, and whose future holds implications for us all.

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