The Desert’s Edge
by Wendy Mills
Accompanied by Warrior and the Perceiver of the Furthest Distance, Grandfather Darwin and Livingstone have spent many weeks with Hugill and Kush in their Eden Garden, recovering from their Great African Expedition. One fine morning, Grandfather decides to take Livingstone to Egypt which is, after all, in Africa and not so very far from the route back to their home in Leicester Square Underground Station, London.
Grandfather believes that time spent in the desert and an encounter with some of the ancient mysteries of Egyptian antiquity will enrich all that they have learned from Hugill about Continuity and the Cycle of Being.
There is an added reason to make this journey: they are going in search of Grandmother Darwin’s long-lost cousin, Gertrude, a hieroglyphics expert, and archaeologist.
What follows is a journey that takes the intrepid pair even deeper into the inner workings of Earth and into the Land of the Soul.
The Soul Travellers
Wendy Mills was born in Johannesburg, South Africa and moved to Cape Town when she was seven years old. She later studied Philosophy and English Literature at the University of Cape Town (UCT), followed by a postgraduate degree in Philosophy at the University of Stellenbosch. She taught Philosophy at UCT and later moved to England where for a period, she taught Philosophy at A Level and for the European Baccalaureate.
Both of Wendy’s grandfathers were refugee children from Eastern Europe who fled to South Africa with their families. The resulting instabilities that this caused for successive generations, coupled with growing up in a society fractured and torn apart by the Apartheid regime, led her to a lifelong quest for truth and meaning. For Wendy, such a quest was beautifully illustrated in Plato’s Allegory of the Cave (The Republic) which became for her one of her deepest and long held metaphors and guides for life. For her, all of these concerns coalesced in a search for roots and a deeper sense of belonging on this planet, both of which themes lie at the heart of Hugill’s Message and the next story to come, A Tale in the Wind. They are ‘wisdom stories’, mythological tales which follow the Quest genre, because for her that form of narrative is the model for human life: a journey in search of deeper meaning.
Wendy has now retired from formal teaching but in a world where spiritual values are increasingly subsumed by materialism, she continues to encourage her children to give Philosophy a central role in their lives. She now lives in South Oxfordshire with her husband and three dogs.