The Immortal Journeys of Isabelle Eberhardt: A Biography

Author:   Hedi A. Jaouad
Publisher:   Three Rooms Press
ISBN:  

9781953103727


Pages:   270
Publication Date:   18 May 2026
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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The Immortal Journeys of Isabelle Eberhardt: A Biography


Overview

""Inspiring, exquisitely researched, and deftly written. I loved it."" -Elizabeth Gilbert, author, Eat, Pray, Love In this powerful new biography, the legendary fin-de-siecle adventuress Isabelle Eberhardt emerges as a radically modern figure who lived on her own terms-crossing boundaries of gender, faith, empire, and identity. In The Immortal Journeys of Isabelle Eberhardt, acclaimed scholar Hedi A. Jaouad offers a bold reexamination of the Swiss-born writer and adventurer whose short life (18771904) has long been romanticized, misread, or exoticized. Unlike previous biographies, this book centers the profound relationship between Eberhardt's writing and the geographies she crossed-revealing how her identity, art, and inner life were shaped not by chronology, but by place. Her story is not one of linear progress, but of dislocation and expansion-where belonging is fluid, and selfhood is constantly rewritten across deserts, ports, souks, and borderlands. Divided into two parts-""Isabelle Bound"" and ""Isabelle Unbound""-the book traces Eberhardt's evolution from a precocious outcast in Geneva to a shape-shifting wanderer in colonial North Africa who lived disguised as an Arab man, converted to Islam, joined a Sufi brotherhood, and fiercely challenged the moral and political boundaries of her time. Jaouad explores how Eberhardt's spatial existence-dizzyingly mobile, vividly immersive-fueled a kind of life writing that is inseparable from place writing. Her diaries and sketches reveal a philosophy of motion as meaning: to cross into new terrain was, for her, to cross into new dimensions of self. Sexually ambiguous, spiritually uncontainable, and politically subversive, Eberhardt's life was lived in deliberate defiance of colonial norms and gendered expectations. Yet she remains difficult to categorize-part saint, part scandal, part cipher. Jaouad's approach, grounded in both literary analysis and postcolonial insight, clears away the myth and restores Eberhardt's full human intensity. He neither sanitizes her kif-fueled escapades nor sensationalizes her untimely death in a flash flood at An Sefra. Instead, he shows how her lived experience was always tethered to the landscapes she inhabited. For readers captivated by outsider lives, feminist iconoclasts, and the search for personal sovereignty, The Immortal Journeys of Isabelle Eberhardt is a landmark biography. It lets Eberhardt emerge not as a symbol or mirage, but as a fiercely real figure-forever on the move, and more relevant now than ever.

Full Product Details

Author:   Hedi A. Jaouad
Publisher:   Three Rooms Press
Imprint:   Three Rooms Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 22.80cm
ISBN:  

9781953103727


ISBN 10:   1953103723
Pages:   270
Publication Date:   18 May 2026
Recommended Age:   From 18 years
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Reviews

“What an astonishing and captivating tale Hédi Jaouad has told, of a woman whose appetites, passions, and desire for exploration could not be contained—and, to this day, can scarcely be believed. This book is what the expression ‘truth is stranger than fiction’ was born for. Inspiring, exquisitely researched, and deftly written. I loved it.” —Elizabeth Gilbert, author, Eat, Pray, Love “Jaouad’s thorough and up-to-date treatment of the Eberhardt saga is the biography she deserves: a poignant narration of genius, courage and tragedy. It is also—like her writings—an inventory of Europe’s willful ignorance of North Africa. Eberhardt’s spiritual and intellectual choices, the keys to her self-confessed “incoherencies” and adventures, go a long way toward correcting this inventory. And Jaouad goes an extra distance in analyzing the politics behind the trial in Constantine, and the psychological/cultural/political importance of Eberhardt’s cross-dressing. A tale as enlightening as it is seductive.” —Peter Thompson, professor, Modern Languages and Literatures, Roger Williams University


“What an astonishing and captivating tale Hédi Jaouad has told, of a woman whose appetites, passions, and desire for exploration could not be contained—and, to this day, can scarcely be believed. This book is what the expression ‘truth is stranger than fiction’ was born for. Inspiring, exquisitely researched, and deftly written. I loved it.” —Elizabeth Gilbert, author, Eat, Pray, Love “Isabelle Eberhardt’s short life was a relentless, tumultuous bid for independence: from the strictures of gender roles, from colonialist dogma, from charted landscapes, from whatever forces impeded her drift. With rigor and warmth, Hédi A. Jaouad sifts the record from the legend to present a complex, galvanizing portrait of an icon whose liminal existence—between man and woman, Europe and North Africa, asceticism and sensuality—continues to unsettle easy categories.” —Jonathan Miles, author, Eradication: A Fable “Jaouad’s thorough and up-to-date treatment of the Eberhardt saga is the biography she deserves: a poignant narration of genius, courage and tragedy. It is also—like her writings—an inventory of Europe’s willful ignorance of North Africa. Eberhardt’s spiritual and intellectual choices, the keys to her self-confessed “incoherencies” and adventures, go a long way toward correcting this inventory. And Jaouad goes an extra distance in analyzing the politics behind the trial in Constantine, and the psychological/cultural/political importance of Eberhardt’s cross-dressing. A tale as enlightening as it is seductive.” —Peter Thompson, professor, Modern Languages and Literatures, Roger Williams University


Author Information

Hedi A. Jaouad is a Professor emeritus of French and Francophone Studies at Skidmore College. His areas of specialization include francophone literature, twentieth-century French literature, history and theory of criticism, comparative literature and African film. He is the author of six books and serves as editor-in-chief of Revue CELAAN, a biannual journal on North African literature, published by the Center for the Studies of the Literatures and Arts of North Africa. He lives in New York.

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