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  • Published: 4 August 2015
  • ISBN: 9780698142718
  • Imprint: PEN US eBook Adult
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

Walking with Abel

Journeys with the Nomads of the African Savannah





Look out for Anna Badkhen's new book, Fisherman's Blues: A West African Community at Sea, on sale now

An intrepid journalist joins the planet’s largest group of nomads on an annual migration that, like them, has endured for centuries.
 
Anna Badkhen has forged a career chronicling life in extremis around the world, from war-torn Afghanistan to the border regions of the American Southwest. In Walking with Abel, she embeds herself with a family of Fulani cowboys—nomadic herders in Mali’s Sahel grasslands—as they embark on their annual migration across the savanna. It’s a cycle that connects the Fulani to their past even as their present is increasingly under threat—from Islamic militants, climate change, and the ever-encroaching urbanization that lures away their young. The Fulani, though, are no strangers to uncertainty—brilliantly resourceful and resilient, they’ve contended with famines, droughts, and wars for centuries.
 
Dubbed “Anna Ba” by the nomads, who embrace her as one of theirs, Badkhen narrates the Fulani’s journeys and her own with compassion and keen observation, transporting us from the Neolithic Sahara crisscrossed by rivers and abundant with wildlife to obelisk forests where the Fulani’s Stone Age ancestors painted tributes to cattle. As they cross the Sahel, the savanna belt that stretches from the Indian Ocean to the Atlantic, they accompany themselves with Fulani music they download to their cell phones and tales of herders and hustlers, griots and holy men, infused with the myths the Fulani tell themselves to ground their past, make sense of their identity, and safeguard their—our—future.

  • Published: 4 August 2015
  • ISBN: 9780698142718
  • Imprint: PEN US eBook Adult
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 320

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Praise for Walking with Abel

"Like so many pieces of yarn, [Badkhen] weaves the words of Persian poets, Western explorers, contemporary journalists and scholars into her narrative, enriching her own account with those that came before... a powerful, unsentimental study of life persisting in extreme conditions. Perhaps the greatest testament to her success is that, upon reading the final page, the reader wonders how the people populating her narrative are faring, and desperately hopes that they are all right." The New York Observer

"Capture[s] the fatalistic ambience of a place where opium addiction is rampant, mobile phones are an impossible luxury and the Taliban lurk in the shadows." The New York Times Book Review

"Transporting... even in this harshest of environments, Badkhen is able to capture kinship, laughter, and merriment... At the risk of spouting clichés (but don't they become such because of the universal truths buried within?), Badkhen weaves her own literary magic." Christian Science Monitor

"Intrepid... Season by season, rite by rite, encounter by encounter, thread by illuminating thread, Badkhen weaves a glorious prose carpet that poignantly captures the surface and the soul of life in Oqa, and in all the Oqas that grace the loom of Afghanistan." National Geographic

"This book will leave you entertained, informed and heartbroken. It will allow you not only to imagine another place but also to bear witness to a community of cultural producers and preservers of the highest skill whose women are able to create objects of beauty amid poverty, hardship and bloodshed." Toronto Star

"Anna Badkhen is the latest chronicler to show how great beauty can come out of great deprivation... borders on the sublime. The World is a Carpet is a well-spun tale of a remote world we rarely see." Financial Times

"The World Is a Carpet will give readers a better understanding of this mysterious land and the courageous and determined people who live there... gorgeous... a lovely treasure unearthed from beneath those shifting desert sands." Dayton Daily News

"Badkhen makes friends and shares their stories, drawing readers into this small village where the dream of wealth is hope for a life without suffering... A beautifully written book of eternal heartbreak." Booklist (starred review)

"Badkhen gains astonishing access... More travelogue than reportage, her prose is rich and unhurried, evoking the harshness of the desolate landscape. Oqa's isolation means Osama bin Laden may be unknown, but the Taliban is not; their presence an inescapable fact of life, one that propels Badkhen's story to a simple yet chilling dénouement." Publishers Weekly (starred review)

"A fearless author regards the Afghans on their own terms... Enormously detailed and moving...­ a dense, intimate portrayal of an ancient people." Kirkus

"In an age when writers too often see Afghanistan from behind guarded compound walls, Badkhen places herself alone, for a year, in rural Afghanistan. This perspective--animated by her love of the country, and her hosts--yields a remarkable account of the rhythms, the wit, and the energy of village life." Rory Stewart, author of The Places in Between

"Nearly a hundred and eighty degrees around the globe, and even farther from our imagining, Anna Badkhen captures with an unerring eye--and just as powerfully, in the haunting cadences of her narrative--the strange, harsh beauty of an unvanquished way of life." William Langewiesche, author of Sahara Unveiled, American Ground, and The Outlaw Sea

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