Descrizione
Price:
(as of Nov 11, 2024 21:17:24 UTC – Details)
Both a gripping tale of adventure and a poetic meditation, Antoine de Saint Exupéry’s Wind, Sand and Stars is the lyrical autobiography of an aviation pioneer, from the author of The Little Prince. This Penguin Modern Classics edition is translated from the French with an introduction by William Rees.
In 1926 de Saint-Exupéry began flying for the pioneering airline Latécoère – later known as Aéropostale – opening up the first mail routes across the Sahara and the Andes. Wind, Sand and Stars is drawn from this experience. Interweaving encounters with nomadic Arabs and other adventures into a richly textured autobiographical narrative, it has its climax in the extraordinary story of Saint-Exupéry’s crash in the Libyan Desert in 1936, and his miraculous survival. ‘Self-discovery comes when a man measures himself against an obstacle,’ writes Saint-Exupéry. This book explores the transcendent perceptions that arise when life is tested to its limits.
Writer and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1900-44), was born in Lyon, France. His first two books, Southern Mail and Night Flight, are distinguished by a poetic evocation of the romance and discipline of flying. Later works, including Wind, Sand and Stars and Flight to Arras, stress his humanistic philosophy. Saint-Exupéry’s popular children’s book The Little Prince is also read by adults for its allegorical meaning. Saint-Exupéry’s plane disappeared during a mission in World War II.
If you enjoyed Wind, Sand and Stars, you might like Woody Guthrie’s Bound for Glory, also available in Penguin Modern Classics.
‘A Conrad of the air … Like Conrad, Saint-Exupéry is a poet of action’
André Maurois
Editore : Penguin Classics (25 maggio 2000)
Lingua : Inglese
Copertina flessibile : 144 pagine
ISBN-10 : 0141183195
ISBN-13 : 978-0141183190
Peso articolo : 1,05 Kilograms
Dimensioni : 13.21 x 1.14 x 19.94 cm
TimothyA –
Read it years ago and wanted a copy to read again. Great book
ridhika khanna –
A beautiful book about romancing the skies… Must read for flying enthusiasts..Bought from Amazon. Delivered on time and in good condition…
C. E. Stevens –
One can’t help but feel that the title (omitting the all important human aspect of the original “Land of Men” title) and the billing as a top “adventure book of all time” are a bit misleading. Not because this book isn’t a fabulous adventure, nor that Saint-Exupery doesn’t portray the wind, sand, and stars with incredible beauty. But rather because, as Saint-Exupery states explicitly himself, his main interest is not the sky but rather the earth that he flies over, and the people that inhabit it. At the heart of this book is the chapter that deals not with flying, but rather the Spanish Civil War, where Saint-Exupery attempts to understand men and mankind. Even for as much passion as Saint-Exupery has for flight and flying, they are a means rather than an end: again, he quite explicitly states that he doesn’t do it for the adventure or because of some kind of deathwish, but rather to think, to explore, to live so that he may better understand humanity and the bigger Truth of the world.That said, I can’t help but imagine that this book inspired many a youth to pursue a career (or at least a hobby) in flying; the depictions of flight and the landscapes he flew over (and sometimes crashed into), especially the desert, have a haunting beauty, and with the benefit of retrospect, carry with them a note of nostalgia for times gone by. For while Saint-Exupery’s interests and his story are ultimately a universal one, the tale itself is very much a product of its time: the twilight of colonialism, the dawn of modernity. Saint-Exupery is clearly a proud product of a powerful, if fading, empire, and even while sympathizing with Others who are not from that heritage, he will occasionally write passages that will be offensive to the more culturally aware 21st century reader. For some readers, this might be an unforgivable flaw, but for me at least I believe one can tell from his writings that Saint-Exupery’s heart is in the right place, even if his perspective is colored by the colonial mindset from whence he came. At the same time, the beginnings of the modern age make for an exciting time, and the frontier for this age is clearly in the sky, not on earth. The danger and, dare I say, the “adventure” of flight give Saint-Exupery a unique and philosophical perspective … it is hard to think of what similar “living on the edge” type frontier exists today that combines danger, adventure, and contemplative solitude … it is hard to think of a modern day “mail pilot” for UPS or FedEx having quite the same philosophical musings today as a mail pilot in his day. Perhaps one day space will indeed live up to its moniker as the final frontier, but for the moment at least, space does not quite represent what the sky in the 1920s and 1930s did. At the same time, Saint-Exupery is clearly wary of this modernity … the horrors of the Spanish Civil War clearly foreshadow the even more horrible events of World War II. While we do not currently live in a world at war quite in the same way as his was becoming, the strife and conflict which abounds today makes Saint-Exupery’s words no less meaningful. And, again, this was his purpose–his thoughts are not bound by time or place, even if his particular experiences were.A gripping tale and beautifully eternal message for those of us living on this Land of Men.
Michael –
Dieses Buch gehört wohl zu einem jener Bücher, welche man niemals richtig vergessen kann – hat man es erst einmal gelesen. Ein Buch voller Demut vor dem Leben, voller Poesie und dem Glauben an den Menschen. Dieses Buch sollte man mehrmals lesen, den es enthält immer wieder nützliches für die täglichen Spiele des Lebens. Zudem ist es auch ganz simple gesagt ein Abenteuerbuch – über vergangene Zeiten und die Herausforderungen der Piloten. Für mich eines der besten Bücher (und ich habe wirklich schon sehr viele Bücher gelesen…)
Moparmel –
Hubby loves anything related to aviation, a great read