This half-journal / half-diary recounts Stark's second trip to Arabia, made during the unprecedented time of "Ingram's Peace" in 1937, named after the British political officer Harold Ingrams. It's hard to believe, but we Brits were actually popular in Arabia at this time. How things change!
Stark travels in the company of two other women, a game geologist, who joins in with the festivals, and an archaeologist uninterested in the locals or their customs (she wears a pair of trousers, which is tantamount to an insult).
Stark herself is searching for the old "incense road" and the lost biblical town of Cana, where Jesus turned the water into wine at a wedding.
Unusually for a classic travel book, Stark actually spends nearly half of it in bed ill with various fevers, laid low by every malign Arabian "microbe" in a time before vaccination.
Alongside her illnesses, the travelling party were hampered by the rebellious Humumi tribes, who have been encouraged by Italian agitators to close the major roads through acts of banditry, so for three months no actual travelling was done.
But Stark still had her diary and her observations. She is constantly visited by the fascinated residents of the wadi, using her nursing skills to treat various ailments and her money to buy their trinkets. She is very popular.
She lists ten virtues for travelers, of which she highlights "a ready quickness in repartee" as being particularly important when amongst Arabs. Also, "To the Arab, manners are everything; he will forgive any amount of extortion so long as 'your speech is good.'"
Clearly Stark's speech was good as she took extraordinary risks, a white woman alone amongst the beduin, and came through.
Also, her writing is good, which is why she has a lasting legacy as more than just an adventuress, but as a writer too. I liked the classical, Shakespearian and Victorian quotes she used to introduce each chapter or diary entry.
But most of all I like her indomitable spirit, which shined as brightly as the stars in the Arabian night sky.