The British campaign in the Sudan in Queen Victoria's reign is an epic
tale of adventure more thrilling than any fiction. The story begins with
the massacre of the 11,000 strong Hicks Pasha column in 1883. Sent to
evacuate the country, British hero General Gordon was surrounded and
murdered in Khartoum by an army of dervishes led by the Mahdi. The
relief mission arrived 2 days too late. The result was a national
scandal that shocked the Queen and led to the fall of the British
government. Twelve years later it was the brilliant Herbert Kitchener
who struck back. Achieving the impossible he built a railway across the
desert to transport his troops to the final devastating confrontation at
Omdurman in 1898. Desert explorer and author Michael Asher has
reconstructed this classic tale in vivid detail. Having covered every
inch of the ground and examined all eyewitness reports, he brings to
bear new evidence questioning several accepted aspects of the story. The
result is an account that sheds new light on the most riveting tale of
honour, courage, revenge and savagery of late Victorian times.