Written in 1898, Arthur Conan Doyle’s classic tale of high adventure portrays an alarmist era of imperial sovereignty, invasive foreign policy, and religious extremism, positing the naivety of a group of Anglo-American holiday-makers against the unbending convictions of Middle Eastern banditti. Among others, a young American ingenue, her matronly aunt, a fusty old bachelor, a loving Irish couple, and an opinionated French graduate gather aboard the Korosko. But during a morning tour of the desert, they are taken hostage by a group whose intention it is either to convert them to Islam or to kill them. Conan Doyle brings his mastery of thrills and suspense to bear on this extraordinary tale of East meets West. Scottish-born writer and novelist Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is best remembered as the creator of the immortal detective Sherlock Holmes.
Novelist and trained doctor, Arthur Conan Doyle wrote prolifically in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Best remembered for his Sherlock Holmes stories, Conan Doyle also wrote widely on British warfare and was known as a campaigner against injustice. His lifelong search for spiritual and religious satisfaction is reflected in much of his work and his last years were dedicated to the development of spiritualism.