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Wind, Sand and Stars

Wind, Sand and Stars

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Author: Antoine De Saint-exupery
Publisher: Harcourt
Category: Book

List Price: $17.00
Buy New: $10.32
You Save: $6.68 (39%)



New (22) Used (11) Collectible (1) from $10.32

Avg. Customer Rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars 41 reviews
Sales Rank: 8743

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.9
Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.6 x 0.8

ISBN: 0151970874
Dewey Decimal Number: 848.91209
EAN: 9780151970872
ASIN: 0151970874

Publication Date: October 15, 1992
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: We suggest expedited shipping (when available).

Also Available In:

  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand and stars
  • Hardcover - Wind, Sand and Stars
  • Paperback - WIND, SAND AND STARS.
  • Paperback - Wind, Sand and Stars (Picador Books)
  • Hardcover - Wind, Sand and Stars
  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand and stars
  • Hardcover - Wind, Sand and Stars (Penguin Twentieth Century Classics)
  • Paperback - Wind, Sand and Stars
  • Paperback - Wind, Sand and Stars
  • Hardcover - Wind, Sand and Stars
  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand and stars
  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand and stars,
  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand, and stars (Harbrace modern classics [18])
  • Unknown Binding - Wind, sand and stars (Harbrace paperbound library)
  • Paperback - Wind, Sand and Stars (Penguin Modern Classics)

Similar Items:

  • Night Flight
  • The Little Prince
  • Flight to Arras
  • A Guide for Grown-ups: Essential Wisdom from the Collected Works of Antoine de Saint-Exupery
  • West with the Night

Editorial Reviews:

Book Description
Recipient of the Grand Prix of the Academie Francaise, Wind, Sand and Stars captures the grandeur, danger, and isolation of flight. Its exciting account of air adventure, combined with lyrical prose and the spirit of a philosopher, makes it one of the most popular works ever written about flying. Translated by Lewis Galantiere.



Customer Reviews:   Read 36 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Flying is just the cover theme   August 7, 2008
Having just finished this book I feel compelled to write a review. This book is about more than flying and the adventures of the French Airmen of that era. This book is a flight into the author's views of self-fulfillment, discovery, and his opinions on humanity, specifically the willingness of certain individuals to sacrifice themselves for a cause. The author relates tales of near misses with disaster and the feelings of redemption and a renewed sense of appreciation for life. There are also times when he feels himself completely isolated from the world below since he is constantly teetering on the brink (naturally, flying was much more dangerous back then)
One theme that is constantly brought up by the author is the value of human relationships and the constant struggle to make them work. The only thing truly valuable we attain in life are hard-earned friendships, especially those that share a common sense of hardship.
Overall this is a very insightful book with a lot of truth. Flying is the cover theme, but the pages and words reveal so much more.




5 out of 5 stars "The physical drama cannot touch us until someone points out its spiritual sense."   June 19, 2008
Like many of his contemporaries, European aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupery (1900 - 1944) was seeking the meaning of life in the post World War I world. He looked for it and often found it outside the bounds of quotidian existence. His job as a pilot for Aeropostale, the French air mail service, offered him a unique perspective as he encountered the elements up close and personal in small planes he guided over vast deserts, oceans and mountains, and through fog, storms and, in a memorable account, a cyclone. His survival depended upon a heightened awareness of nature's elements. His was a life lived large and he knew it; he pities the poor bureaucrat's confined existence; he pities even more the child who with the right "gardener" could become a prince or another Mozart but who is groomed rather to lead a circumscribed life.

His narrative never bogs as he connects the concrete elements of nature with abstract sentiments. He renders his adventures vividly, especially the climatic chapter in which he and his mechanic survive a crash in the Sahara with almost no provisions. A year after that, in 1936, he goes off to Spain and the Civil War to learn why it is that mankind reaches the flash point of war and willingly puts itself in harm's way. That experience and the lessons it divulges comprise the last chapter. Among his often surprising observations is the note on how wild geese flying overhead can stir domestic birds below.

The author speaks in the idiom of a masculine age and a self-assured European culture. The idiom is noticeable but does not diminish the vision or lyricism of the book. I read the 1967 Harvest edition of the book that offered a translation that preserved the authentic voice of the book.



5 out of 5 stars Wisdom from an earlier generation   June 10, 2008
It is not exaggeration to say that the reading of four books--one of them "The Little Prince" by St. Exupery--changed my life. It would also not be an overstatement to say all my reading now is done to try to find another title or two to add to this list. (Maybe, though, the changing of my life is of little consequence. . .it slips away. . .it slips away. Maybe now I read to have another title to suggest to my children. They still, I hope, have much of life left. Let their changing begin.)

So, I suggest the "Wind Sand, and Stars" to them.
St. Exupery writes so convincingly of what the human spirit could achieve:
"To be a (man) is precisely, to be responsible. . .It is to feel, when setting one's stone, that one is contributing to the building of the world."
and so devastatingly about what is has achieved:
". . .war is won by him who rots last--but in the end both rot together."
There is wisdom in this book; wisdom in all his books.

I worry, though, that my suggestion will go unheeded. St. Exupery was younger than both my grandfathers. Yet he writes of a world foreign, maybe unknowable, to me--a world, despite its ugliness and hatred, with nobility and honor. I can't imagine, as St. Exupery relates in one tale, a world where an enemy Arab army--forced into a very temporary, very awkward alliance with French soldiers--appeals to the French for a resupply of ammunition spent in that defense. And the French officer--in gratitude for that temporary support, yet knowing the ammunition would likely be used against his own men--complied!

This past world seems so unreal to me, who reads. How will it seem to my children (and the rest of their generation who foolishly) don't?

So, I suggest this to you this generation and, also, I warn.



5 out of 5 stars Adventure, Philosophy, Aviation . . . all of it   May 23, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

A wonderful, wonderful autobiographical work by the French aviation pioneer. Antione de Saint-Exupery was among those first who flew the scheduled air mail runs over the Sahara in the 1920's and 30's. Engine failures, crahses, and falling into the hands of hostile Bedouins was not uncommon. Those stories alone would make for fascinating reading.

Add to that the author's genuine talent as a poet philospher, and this is a unique and great piece of historical literature. Saint-Exupery finds magic and value in everything . . . the lights of his primitive dashbord at night, the world scrolling under him while in flight, the hallucinations while dying of thirst face down in the desert sand. And his observations of people! - the love-hate relationship with the Arabs of the desert, a pair of little princesses living in fantastical (because the author makes it so) house in a remote jungle village, the heroics of Spanish revolutionaries and patriots.

The adventure aspects rival any fiction I have read . . . flying while held stationary in a tremendous offshore windstorm off the South American coast . . . the magic of nightfall while in flight . . . slamming into the Libyan desert floor while flying blind.

As he is wont to do, Saint-Ex frequently treks off into the motivations and worth of mens' efforts, and the human situation in general. But always good stuff, some of it ingenious. Thoughtful, posing many truths and questions.

A wonderful work. I had to read it in English, and doubtlessly something has been lost in the translation from French (transl by Lewis Galantiere). Still, not to be missed.



5 out of 5 stars a great tale of humanity   April 30, 2008
 12 out of 13 found this review helpful

What genre is represented by "Wind, Sand and Stars"? A memoir, a novel, a moral tale, an essay, a travelogue? It is difficult to put a label on this book, because it has a bit of each genre. Antoine de Saint-Exupery, a pilot and a poet, best known for his beautiful tale "The Little Prince", which enchanted generations of children and adults, wrote about his experience as a pilot. This is the surface of "Wind, Sand and Stars". There is much more to it, though.

The book was published in 1939. It is hard to believe that on the brink of a great war in Europe, when it was already obvious that the war is inevitable, and many writers created the premonitory visions of doom, Saint-Exupery wrote with great tenderness and faith about the power of humanity.

The job and life of the airplane pilot are for the author an occasion for metaphores. The flights require attention and precision in addition to the observations of nature, the rocks, sand or sea underneath, the stars, moon and sun in the sky above. There is a lot of joy in seeing the Earth from above, but the loneliness adds to the philosophical quality of long flights. Because in the 1930's the airplane technology was not very sophisticated, there were many sudden, unexpected accidents. The constant danger and many lurking traps are described with examples: the accidents of the author's colleagues, Guillaumet and Mermoz, as well as his own in Sahara, and their struggle to survive in the snow, mountains, and desert, without water, food, and rest, show humanity in a most beautiful way. As Saint-Exupery says, in the words of his fellow pilot Guillaumet, who survived in the glacier: "What I did, no animal would ever do".

Saint-Exupery believed in the power of human mind and emotion, in the connection between all human beings - which is obvious when he writes about his experience with Beduins, so different and strange for the French pilot, who could not understand their culture, yet living according to equally valid moral principles and helpful in need. He criticized materialism, and although admired technology and civilization, warned against it becoming a goal in itself.

Banal? Simple? Maybe, but all of us need such positive, however trivial, life philosophy, once in a while, to escape from our daily life, to reconnect and rethink our purpose.


 

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