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Paperback Motoring with Mohammed: Journeys to Yemen and the Red Sea Book

ISBN: 067973855X

ISBN13: 9780679738558

Motoring with Mohammed: Journeys to Yemen and the Red Sea

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Book Overview

In 1978 Eric Hansen found himself shipwrecked on a desert island in the Red Sea. When goat smugglers offered him safe passage to Yemen, he buried seven years' worth of travel journals deep in the sand... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

6 ratings

This is one of my favorite books.

I read this book every 4-5 years. It such fun! And it’s a true story.

A Voyage of Discovery

I reread this book in preparation for coming to the country. It is exquisitely written, and immensely helpful. The author captures the Yemeni as well as their culture, while recounting his adventures without pretense. This is not the ordinary travelouge, as it is a quest, a mystery, a search for the lost journals. It even starts with a shipwreck, where most novels wait till the climax of the story to introduce such a development. And then Hansen begins the long journey of trying to weed through Yemeni beaurocracy to get permission to recover the journals. Having experienced the difficulties just recently of trying to even enter the country, I can relate very well to Hansen's writings. Getting things done here doesn't so much depend on having the right forms as on having the right relationship, building a relationship of comradery, food, and jokes; having an emotional connection. This comes through very clearly in Hansen's journey. It is an immensely personal work, where we learn as much about Hansen as we do about Yemen. I appreciate this. He writes in such a way as to allow the reader to identify with the author, to see the world simultanously etically as an outsider, and emically, within Hansen. Even though speaking little Arabic, he enters into the Yemeni world of humor, qat, and relaxation. There is much here that I want to see and do once in Yemen, and so the book becomes a guide as well. Hansen's visions of the ancient dam of Ma'rib and the skyscrapers perched on cliff edge are enticing. One of the best travelouges I have ever read.

One of the most engaging books I've ever read

I read this book nearly at one sitting, literally sitting, up in bed one night when I should have been sleeping. Four or five times I awakened my husband, shaking the bed with my laughter, especially when Mohammed moved a sheep into the back seat of his taxi for the next five days, saying, "The sheep won't mind."Eric Hansen has scored with this book, and I've recommended it to probably 40 people and given it as a gift to 5-6.Read it and enjoy in - on many levels.

where waiting is the destination

Within three hours of finishing this book, my copy was flogged by a friend who's off for a year in India on an antique motorbike. These adventurers must have some kind of tribal recognition."Motoring with Mohammed" is a book in three parts. The first bit is true adventure, storms at sea, a shipwreck, a desert island, the revelation of character among the survivors, brigands, and an unlikely rescue. It's great writing, deft and light, touching beauty and terror.The second, and major, part of the book recounts Hansen's return to Yemen ten years later to look for a personal treasure he left on the island. In truth, not much happens, but in Eric Hansen's hands it always manages to not happen in an interesting way. His introduction to the local narcotic "qat", his subtle dance with intransigent bureaucracy, his unwise wanderings in high, misty mountains and along the edge of great deserts of The Empty Quarter make this a great read. Hansen never meets an uninteresting person. Even the hostile and the dull are intriguing or comical in his hands. He gets to travel with sheep and mystic woodsmen, to meet an ageing Frenchwoman under a tragic spell, a toilet inspector, and the ghost of his grandmother. Along the way, he gets to play with his favorite theme: the essence of "destination". He doesn't labour it, but you know what he means.The third, and briefest, part of his story is an unexpected twist, which neatly closes the circle even if by that stage we hardly require it.A friend of mind informed me that Yemen ranks bottom of the world for gender equality. Certainly no woman could have written this book. The more reason for us to be grateful for this window on a little-known world. Eric Hansen has written a beguiling and joyous story. When you've finished enjoying it, seek out his even more extraordinary account of his Borneo travels, "Stranger In the Forest". But with all these books, don't expect to hang on to your copy for long.

Expanded my knowlege and understanding of Yemen

When Eric Hansen, an American, found himself shipwrecked on an island off the coast of Yemen in 1978, he buried his journals in the sand. Ten years later, he returns to try to retrieve these journals. This book is a result of those travels.The sights, sounds, and smells surround his narrative, whether describing a storm at sea, impressive architecture or the scent of perfume that follows the veiled women.There are government restrictions, of course, but he still is treated with hospitality wherever he goes. He joins the men in their communal qat-chewing sessions where whole afternoons are spent under the intoxicating effects of this slightly narcotic drug. He hikes for miles over extremely dangerous terrain. He visits the baths, the bazaars, the prison. And considering the fact that he only speaks English, he manages to have conversations with a wide variety of people. Always, his observations are clear and show his respect for the people of Yemen and their culture.As an armchair traveler I was delighted with this book. It was wonderful seeing the world through Mr. Hansen's eyes. However, he is a man and so therefore his experiences were that of the male world. This is no fault of the book or of his writing. After all, he only could write about what he experienced.I recommend this book heartily. It brought me to Yemen, taught be about the land and the people, and expanded my appreciation and depth of understanding of a place I will likely never visit. For this I thank the author.

Eric Hansen captures the flavor of Yemen.

I read this book shortly after returning from my own trip to Yemen with my husband and children. Eric Hansen caught the spirit of the people and presents it to his readers without falling into that all-too-common trap of criticizing that which he may have found unpleasant. I learned much about Yemen by reading this book and asking my husband about it later. I still refer to chapters in his book when discussing world events with friends.I recommend this book to anyone who enjoys exploring forgotten lands, and for anyone who is happy tagging along for an interesting cab ride around the beautiful land that was once part of the ancient Kingdom of Sheba.It's easy to become entranced by the people and their way of life, and Eric Hansen presents it well.Enjoy....
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