
Sons of Sindbad
Sailing with the Arabs in Their Dhows, in the Red Sea, Round the Coasts of Arabia, and to Zanzibar and Tanganyika, Pearling in the Persian Gulf, and the Life of the Shipmasters and the Mariners of Kuwait
Alan Villiers(Author)
Arabian Publishing Ltd
Published on 1. July 2006
Book
Hardback
480 pages
978-0-9544792-3-7 (ISBN)
Description
Alan Villiers (1903-82), the Australian sailor and maritime historian, first made a name for himself as an adventurer in the 1920s and 1930s by combining his seafaring skills with his talent as a pioneering photojournalist. He visited Arabia in 1938 because he was certain that he was living through the last days of sail, and was determined to record as much of them as he was able. At Aden, Villiers found an Arab dhow master prepared to take on a lone Westerner as a crewman. Ali bin Nasr el-Nejdi and his Kuwaiti crew were making the age-old voyage from the Gulf to East Africa, coasting on the north-east monsoon winds, with a cargo of dates from Basra. The return voyage would be made in the early summer of 1939, on the first breezes of the south-west monsoon, from East Africa to Kuwait. From this voyage, Villiers fashioned Sons of Sindbad . First published in 1940, it is the sole work of Arabian travel to have at its centre the seafaring Arabs. In a real sense the Thesiger of the Arabian Sea, Villiers voyaged with his companions as an equal, while deferring to their toughness and fortitude, and to their superior knowledge of their trade.
This great classic of Arabian travel and maritime adventure is reprinted for the first time since 1969, with a new introduction by William Facey, Yacoub Al-Hijji and Grace Pundyk. As in the original 1940 edition, 50 of Villiers' many photographs are published here - images that complement the text with strikingly vivid depictions of the life and skills of the Arab dhow sailors, of the ports along the route, of Kuwait itself, and of the pearl divers of the Arabian Gulf.
This great classic of Arabian travel and maritime adventure is reprinted for the first time since 1969, with a new introduction by William Facey, Yacoub Al-Hijji and Grace Pundyk. As in the original 1940 edition, 50 of Villiers' many photographs are published here - images that complement the text with strikingly vivid depictions of the life and skills of the Arab dhow sailors, of the ports along the route, of Kuwait itself, and of the pearl divers of the Arabian Gulf.
Reviews / Votes
"The long overdue reprint of Sons of Sindbad, first published in 1940...vividly documents the vanishing universe of sail in the western half of the Indian Ocean on the eve of the Second World War...The collaborative introduction...could hardly be bettered...as an appraisal of Villiers' life and achievement...The authors contend that Villiers was the Thesiger of the Arabian Sea...a view which few readers are likely to contest." -- John Shipman, Asian Affairs, March 2008 "For academics who feel guilty about reading fun books when they should be keeping up with the literature in their field by reading serious books, I bring glad tidings. The new reprint of Sons of Sindbad offers the opportunity to mix Villiers' account of a voyage to the East African coast in a Kuwaiti dhow with a new introduction that places this account in the context of his life and work. The result is a book that is at once a real pleasure to read but also...one that can be placed in the "serious books" category...Even if you own [an] older edition, it would be worth springing for a copy of the new one just for the photos." - Erik Gilbert, International Journal of Maritime History, June 2007More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Surbiton
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Medina Publishing Ltd
Illustrations
Illus.
Dimensions
Height: 156 mm
Width: 234 mm
Weight
885 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-9544792-3-7 (9780954479237)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Alan Villiers (1903-82) was a pioneering Australian photojournalist and sailor who made a career out of voyaging on board the last great sailing ships. His best-selling books made him famous, and his photographs formed the nucleus of the National Maritime Museum's photographic collections. William Facey is a historian of Arabia. He is also a museum consultant and a director of the London Centre of Arab Studies.
Content
Introduction; Precarious Pyramid: The Economics & Politics of the CPP; The Quebec Pension Plan; Institutional Arrangements & Lessons for Alberta; Checking Out of the Hotel California: The Desirability of an Alberta Pension Plan; Alberta Opting Out of the Canada Pension Plan: Can it be done? Should it be done?; An Alberta Pension Plan: What Have We Learned?