Librería Samer Atenea
Librería Aciertas (Toledo)
Kálamo Books
Librería Perelló (Valencia)
Librería Elías (Asturias)
Donde los libros
Librería Kolima (Madrid)
Librería Proteo (Málaga)
In 1897, Isabelle Eberhardt, the daughter of a Russian aristocratic exile and an anarchist tutor, abandoned the stifling constraints of European society for the boundless freedom of North Africa. What followed was a radical act of self-invention. Rejecting her gender and her privilege, she transformed herself into Si Mahmoud Saadi, a wandering Muslim taleb (seeker).Through her male disguise, Eberhardt gained unprecedented access to the innermost workings of colonial Algeria, traveling vast, dangerous distances by camel and horse. She chronicled the lives of the colonized with an intimacy no European had ever achieved, producing fierce, compassionate reportage that served as a profound, early critique of French imperial power.But her life was a constant high-wire act-a perpetual negotiation between her spiritual quest, her political activism, and her deep, unconventional love for her husband, the Spahi soldier Slimane Ehnni. A pioneer of gender fluidity and immersive travel writing, Eberhardt lived on the extreme margins, seeking absolute authenticity until the bitter end.This comprehensive biography traces Isabelle Eberhardt’s uncontainable journey, from the bohemian chaos of her youth to the feverish intensity of her final years as a journalist. It culminates in the tragic, mythic destruction of her life and work in the Aïn Sefra flash flood, ensuring her legacy as one of the most enigmatic and revolutionary figures of the modern age. Discover the true story of the woman who burned her bridges to civilization to become a free man of the desert. Approx.164 pages, 32000 word count