Wind, Sand and Stars

First U.S. edition book jacket (publisher: Reynal & Hitchcock)

Wind, Sand and Stars (French title: Terre des hommes, literally "Land of Men") is a memoir by the French aristocrat aviator-writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, and a winner of several literary awards. It was first published in France in February 1939, and was then translated by Lewis Galantière and published in English by Reynal and Hitchcock in the United States later the same year.[1]

The book's themes deal with friendship, death, heroism, camaraderie and solidarity among colleagues, humanity and the search for meaning in life. The book illustrates the author's view of the world and his opinions of what makes life worth living.

The central incident he wrote of detailed his 1935 plane crash in the Sahara Desert between Benghazi and Cairo, which he barely survived along with his mechanic-navigator, André Prévot. Saint-Exupéry and his navigator were left almost completely without water and food, and as the chances of finding an oasis or help from the air gradually decreased, the two men nearly died of thirst before they were saved by a Bedouin on a camel.

Wind, Sand and Stars also provided storylines for his book Le Petit Prince with many of the same themes outlined above, particularly camaraderie and friendship. [2]

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference Miller-Fay-1946a was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ "The True Events That Inspired 'The Little Prince'". 4 August 2016.