Before smooth tarmac and digital tracking, the world's trade moved on dust, ruts, and memory. This book steps into that rough-edged era, following the convoy drivers, mechanics, innkeepers, smugglers, and surveyors who crafted reliability out of breakdowns and bad news. It shows how their decisions shaped overland travel history long before container ships and cargo jets took the credit. Through vivid portraits, the narrative traces pre highway routes that linked ports to interior markets, and caravan towns to distant capitals. Readers meet the workers who turned improvised tracks into dependable corridors, from bush mechanics salvaging parts in border towns to postmasters redesigning timetables with a pencil and a gut feeling. Alongside them stand women overland pioneers whose labour has mostly vanished from official records but not from local memory. For readers who care about historic supply chains, global trade, or the romance and reality of caravan trade routes, this book offers a grounded alternative to both nostalgia and techno-optimism. It reveals how today's logistics still rest on human judgement, quiet courage, and unglamorous repetition. You will finish with a different way of seeing the next parcel on your doorstep or coach at the roadside: not as a minor convenience, but as the latest chapter in a long story about what it really takes to keep the world moving.
By:
Selma Aarvik Imprint: Alpha Editions ISBN:9789375365679 ISBN 10: 9375365670 Pages: 244 Publication Date:30 November 2025 Audience:
General/trade
,
ELT Advanced
Format:Paperback Publisher's Status: Active