
DESERT AIR - By Robert Hichens
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A chance dinner conversation in a London restaurant turns into a probing discussion about how distant climes can reshape a person’s temperament. A confident young Englishman, a meticulous West‑End doctor, and the narrator trade theories, and the doctor cites a mysterious incident in the Sahara as proof that the desert’s pure, intoxicating air can alter even the steadiest mind.
The story then follows the narrator’s reluctant expedition across endless dunes to Beni‑Kouidar, a remote oasis town where the heat is fierce and the atmosphere feels “as dry as the finest champagne.” Accompanied by a one‑eyed Arab guide and a solemn Oxford graduate named Henry Marnier, the party confronts a city divided among cultures, the ever‑present nomads, and the unsettling allure of the desert’s breath. As they press onward, the stark landscape begins to test their resolve, hinting at changes that may prove far more profound than any lecture could predict.
Full title
Desert Air 1905 1905
Language
en
Duration
~26 minutes (25K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-11-08
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1864–1950
A bestselling English novelist of the late Victorian and Edwardian years, he moved easily between satire, romance, mystery, and the supernatural. Best remembered for The Green Carnation and The Garden of Allah, he wrote with a sharp social eye and a flair for atmosphere.
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