Présentation de l'éditeur
In the summer of 1964, while a military coup was taking place and tanks were rolling through the streets of Algiers, Robert Irwin set off for Algeria in search of Sufi enlightenment. There he entered a world of marvels and ecstasy, converted to Islam and received an initiation as a faqir. He learnt the rituals of Islam in North Africa and he studied Arabic in London. He also pursued more esoteric topics under a holy fool possessed of telepathic powers. A series of meditations on the nature of mystical experience run through this memoir. But political violence, torture, rock music, drugs, nightmares, Oxbridge intellectuals and first love and its loss are all part of this strange story from the 1960s.
Revue de presse
A fascinating journey into the spirit and adventure of the sixties by someone who was there, and who, luckily for us, remembered every extraordinary thing. ― Esther Freud
The richness of texture and tone...coupled with the unusual nature of the story...make Memoirs of a Dervish compelling, fascinating and enriching. -- Anthony Sattin ― Spectator
This is a heady, insightful and melancholy trip. -- Ali Catterall ― Word
What emerges here is a tale as fluid and as finally mysterious as the life it recounts...Here, at last, Irwin may have found a truly perennial philosophy. -- John Gray ― New Statesman
Packed with extraordinary characters and incidents as well as (this being the sixties) a generous helping of drugs, sex and rock 'n' roll. ― London Review Bookshop
Irwin's witty, casually erudite tribute to his clever, naïve youth shows that there are no shortcuts to wisdom. But if often comes with age. -- Steve Jelbert ― Independent on Sunday
Memoirs of a Dervish - charged with life, humanity and humour - opens one's eyes to possibilities, which was what the 1960s vibe was about, after all. ― Financial Times
I could not put down Memoirs of a Dervish until I had read it twice over. This is a brilliant, free-ranging, mind-enhancing, life-cautioning book. Beware. -- Barnaby Rogerson ― The Independent
Robert Irwin's memoir is a fabulously entertaining tale. ― The Metro
Irwin brilliantly conjures up the mood of the late Sixties, with its blind innocence, fanciful enthusiasms and blissful music...For the reader, the journey - and the fall - is an illuminating and immensely engrossing one. -- Mick Brown ― Literary Review
An extraordinary book. ― Conde Nast Traveller
Biographie de l'auteur
Robert Irwin is a novelist, publisher, reviewer, Arabist and historian. He was formerly a lecturer in the Department of Mediaeval History in the University of St Andrews and he is currently a Senior Research Associate of the History Department of the School of Oriental and African Studies, London University. He has published seventeen books, of which six are novels. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. Memoirs of a Dervish is published by Profile in 2011.