Carthage Magazine · Tunisia’s story, told in English
A Carthage Magazine Travel Guide · First Edition

All About Tunisia.

The definitive English-language traveler’s guide — twenty-seven chapters, 156,000 words, written and verified by Tunisians who actually live here.

572 pages 27 chapters 9 regions PDF & EPUB
$24.99
Digital edition · Instant download · Lifetime access
Get the guide
A note from the editors

The Tunisia you won’t find in a brochure.

Seven years ago, we started Carthage Magazine because the English-language world’s image of Tunisia stopped at Carthage and beach resorts. There is a country between those things — the Tunisia of olive harvests, Roman backroads, language and food and faith — and most of it was being described by people who flew in for ten days, ate at the hotel, and went home.

This book is the version we wish someone had given us the first time we tried to explain Tunisia to a friend. Twenty-seven chapters. One hundred and fifty-six thousand words. Five hundred and seventy-two pages. Every chapter written or verified by Tunisians who live here.

A guidebook is only as honest as the people who write it. This one was written by people who live here.

We’ve included the things the brochures leave out. The taxi fare you should be paying from the airport. Which Roman ruins are as complete as anywhere in the Mediterranean and almost empty. The regional dishes nobody outside Sfax has heard of. What changes during Ramadan and what doesn’t.

We’ve also said the things the brochures won’t. Where to be careful. How to recognize the moment when “tea with the family” becomes a hard sell at a carpet shop. What it’s actually like to be a woman travelling alone here.

It exists now. — The Carthage Magazine editorial staff, Tunis
The scope

A whole country, actually covered.

Most English-language guides to Tunisia stop at the coast. This one crosses the Atlas, the Sahel, the Sahara — and gives you the cultural keys to make sense of all of it.

156k
Words
572
Pages
27
Chapters
9 + 2
UNESCO inscriptions
The heritage

Every UNESCO inscription, covered in detail.

Nine World Heritage Sites and two Intangible Cultural Heritage inscriptions — written about with the seriousness they deserve.

i.
Site of Carthage
The Punic and Roman capital
ii.
Medina of Tunis
700 monuments across an Islamic city
iii.
Amphitheatre of El Jem
Almost as complete as the Colosseum
iv.
Kairouan
The fourth holy city of Islam
v.
Medina of Sousse
A fortified Aghlabid port
vi.
Dougga
The best-preserved Roman town in Africa
vii.
Kerkuane
The only surviving Punic town
viii.
Ichkeul National Park
A wetland of continental importance
ix.
Island of Djerba
A unique island settlement pattern
What’s inside

Twenty-seven chapters across four parts.

Practical chapters to read before you fly. Cultural chapters to understand the country you’re in. Regional chapters when you’re deciding where to go. Thematic trails when you want a journey with a thread.

Part I — Before You Go Practical, 8 chapters
Chapter I
Visas, Entry & Getting There
Visa-free nationalities, airport realities, ferries
Chapter II
Money, Costs & Tipping
The dinar, ATMs, cash culture, real prices
Chapter III
Getting Around
Taxis, louages, trains, rentals, the SNCFT
Chapter IV
Where to Stay
Riads, resorts, dar guesthouses, the desert
Chapter V
Health, Safety & Solo Travel
Pharmacies, hospitals, women travellers, honest framing
Chapter VI
Communications & Connectivity
SIM cards, eSIM, Wi-Fi, calling home
Chapter VII
Etiquette, Customs & What to Wear
Greetings, hospitality, dress, the unwritten rules
Chapter VIII
When to Visit
Climate, seasons, Ramadan, festivals, harvests
Part II — The Country in Context Cultural, 5 chapters
Chapter IX
A Short History — Carthage to Today
Three thousand years in one readable chapter
Chapter X
The Cuisine
Regional traditions, harissa, the tea ritual
Chapter XI
The Languages
Derja, French, Berber — what to use when
Chapter XII
Religion in Daily Life
Islam, the call to prayer, Friday, modesty
Chapter XIII
Crafts, Music & the Arts
Carpets, ceramics, malouf, contemporary scene
Part III — The Nine Regions Where to go, 9 chapters
Chapter XIV
Tunis & Greater Tunis
Medina, Carthage, Sidi Bou Said, La Marsa
Chapter XV
Cap Bon Peninsula
Hammamet, Nabeul, Kerkouane, Korba
Chapter XVI
The North Coast
Bizerte, Tabarka, the Mediterranean north
Chapter XVII
The Northwest & Tell Atlas
Béja, Jendouba, Aïn Draham, Dougga, Bulla Regia
Chapter XVIII
The Sahel
Sousse, Monastir, Mahdia, El Jem
Chapter XIX
Sfax & the Kerkennah Islands
The working capital, the quiet islands
Chapter XX
The Centre — Kairouan & the Plateau
The holy city, Sbeïtla, the inland heart
Chapter XXI
Djerba & the Southern Coast
The island, Gabès, the Ras R’mel sandbar
Chapter XXII
The Sahara
Tozeur, Douz, Matmata, Tataouine, Ksar Ouled Soltane
Part IV — Thematic Trails Journeys with a thread, 5 chapters
Chapter XXIII
The Roman Trail
Carthage, Dougga, El Jem, Sbeïtla, Bulla Regia
Chapter XXIV
The Islamic Heritage Trail
Kairouan, Mahdia, Tunis Medina, Sufi shrines
Chapter XXV
The Star Wars Trail
Tozeur, Matmata, Tataouine, Ksar Hadada
Chapter XXVI
The Tunisian Food Trail
Regional specialities, market days, vineyard country
Chapter XXVII
The Hiking Trail
Aïn Draham forests, Cap Bon cliffs, desert traverses
The geography

Nine regions, one country.

Tunisia is small on the map and large in variety. Each regional chapter is a self-contained guide — what to see, where to sleep, how to get there, what to skip, what to know.

i.

Tunis & Greater Tunis

Where ancient Carthage meets the modern capital — and the most beautiful village on the Mediterranean sits in between.
Medina · Carthage · Sidi Bou Said
ii.

Cap Bon Peninsula

Citrus groves, Punic ruins, and the country’s most underrated stretch of coastline. Where Tunisians actually summer.
Hammamet · Nabeul · Kerkouane
iii.

The North Coast

Pine forests above turquoise water, an old corsair port, and a coastline most travelers never see.
Bizerte · Tabarka · Cap Serrat
iv.

The Northwest

The Tell Atlas — green hills, forgotten Roman cities, Berber villages, and the most complete archaeological site in North Africa.
Dougga · Bulla Regia · Aïn Draham
v.

The Sahel

The coastal heartland — fortified medinas, the Roman amphitheatre that almost rivals Rome’s, and the country’s second city.
Sousse · Monastir · Mahdia · El Jem
vi.

Sfax & the Kerkennah Islands

Tunisia’s working capital and a chain of low, quiet islands where time has politely declined to keep up.
Sfax · Kerkennah · the medina
vii.

The Centre

Kairouan, the fourth holy city of Islam, surrounded by an inland plateau most foreigners cross without stopping. They shouldn’t.
Kairouan · Sbeïtla · Kasserine
viii.

Djerba & the South-East

An island that has been Phoenician, Roman, Jewish, Muslim, and a holiday resort — sometimes all in the same kilometre.
Djerba · Gabès · Zarzis
ix.

The Sahara

Oasis towns, troglodyte villages, salt flats that mirror the sky, and the dunes where Luke Skywalker grew up.
Tozeur · Douz · Matmata · Tataouine
The thematic trails

Five journeys, five threads.

For travelers who want a trip with a story rather than a checklist — the guide ends with five curated trails, each crossing several regions.

XXIII.
R

The Roman Trail

Five sites that together tell the story of Roman Africa — from imperial Carthage to provincial Dougga.

XXIV.
I

The Islamic Trail

From the Great Mosque of Kairouan to the Sufi shrines of the south — Tunisia as a centre of Islamic civilisation.

XXV.
S

The Star Wars Trail

Tatooine was Tataouine. Four locations where the original films were shot — and where to find them today.

XXVI.
F

The Food Trail

Regional specialities province by province — where to find the dishes that don’t leave the towns they come from.

XXVII.
H

The Hiking Trail

From the cork-oak forests of Aïn Draham to the cliffs of Cap Bon to a guided traverse of the dunes.

The honest framing

What this guide does, and what it doesn’t.

The first thing most travel books do is overpromise. We’d rather you know what kind of book this is before you buy it.

What it covers

  • Every region, every UNESCO site, in honest detail.
  • The practical mechanics — visas, taxis, money, SIM cards, ATMs.
  • The cultural context that turns sightseeing into understanding.
  • The Tunisia foreigners rarely see, written by people who do.
  • Walking routes, real prices, the unwritten rules.

What it isn’t

  • A hotel review aggregator. We don’t rank the resort buffets.
  • A “top ten” brochure. Tunisia is more interesting than a list.
  • A romance about the country. We say the difficult things too.
  • An academic history. The history chapter is one chapter long.
  • A language course — for that, see our phrasebook.
The team

Written by an editorial staff, verified by Tunisians.

Not the work of one outsider. The work of a magazine that has been documenting this country in English since 2019.

CM
Editorial direction

The Carthage Magazine Editorial Staff

Founded in Tunis in 2019, Carthage Magazine is Tunisia’s first and largest English-language general-interest publication. Seven years of writing about the country — its food, its history, its cities, its language, its overlooked corners — gave the editorial team the foundation for this book. Every chapter has been written, reviewed, and cross-checked in-house.

With contributions from

  • Saber Ben Hassen Founder, Carthage Magazine · Language & capital
  • Amira Ben Harcha Food writer · Cuisine & food trail
  • Oumaima Saoudi Cultural writer · Crafts & etiquette
  • Tayssir Ben Hassen Travel writer · The Sahel & Cap Bon
  • Ghassen Fartoun Historian · History & Roman trail
  • Zied Karray Photographer & researcher · The Sahara
  • Majdi Zhioua Practical research · Transport & logistics
Available now
— ◆ —

Bring Tunisia home.

$24.99
Digital edition · 572 pages · Instant download
PDF & EPUBBoth formats
156k wordsAcross 27 chapters
All devicesPhone, tablet, e-reader
LifetimeFree updates
Get the guide
Secure checkout · Instant download · All major cards accepted
Questions

Before you buy.

Two main differences. First, this guide is written by Tunisians. The international titles are usually written by outside correspondents who visit for a few weeks. Ours is built on seven years of on-the-ground reporting by a magazine based in Tunis. Second, it’s written specifically for a comprehensive understanding of one country, rather than as one entry in a global series. That means cultural context most international guides skip — history, language, religion, regional cuisines, etiquette — gets actual chapters here, not paragraphs.
Yes. The first edition was researched and written across 2025–2026 and reflects the country as it actually is now — current visa rules, current prices in Tunisian dinars, current transport realities, current openings and closures of major sites. You receive lifetime access, which means future revised editions are free downloads for existing buyers. When Tunisia changes, the guide changes.
Your purchase delivers the PDF instantly — the format most travelers prefer for tablets, desktops, and printing individual chapters before a trip. An EPUB edition (for Kindle, Kobo, Apple Books, and other e-readers) is also available on request — just reply to your receipt email and we’ll send it over within a day.
Yes — and we strongly recommend you do. Once you download the PDF, it lives on your device. No internet needed, no app to install, no roaming fees. Most travelers download the file to their phone before flying.
Not at all. The book is structured to be read selectively. Most travelers read Part I (the practical chapters) before they fly — that’s about 90 pages — then dip into the regional and thematic chapters that apply to their itinerary while they’re on the trip. The table of contents and chapter-level cross-references make this painless. You can think of it as a country reference you keep on your phone rather than a novel you read cover to cover.
Yes. We love this country and we don’t romanticize it. The guide is candid about safety, scams, harassment for solo women travelers, the realities of bargaining, what changes during Ramadan, what doesn’t work the way the brochures say. That candor is the whole point — it’s what tells you a Tunisian wrote the book, not a marketing team.
Yes — please get in touch with us through carthagemagazine.com to arrange a gifted copy with a personal note from you to the recipient.
A print edition is in development — at 572 pages, the paper version is a serious undertaking. Subscribe to the Carthage Magazine newsletter to be notified when it’s available.
The Carthage Magazine collection

Three books, one country.

The guide tells you where to go and what you’re looking at. The phrasebook gives you the language to talk to the people you meet. The cookbook is what you’ll want to cook when you get home. Together, they’re the project.

A Phrasebook

Speak Like a Local

by Saber Ben Hassen

Tunisian Arabic for travelers, with audio recorded in Tunis by a native speaker — 200+ phrases, 13 chapters.

$14.99 See the phrasebook →
A Cookbook

The Authentic Tunisian Cookbook

by Rahma Rekik & Amira Ben Harcha

Sixty traditional recipes from the heart of North Africa — from the harissa of Tunis to the saffron rice of Djerba.

$9.99 See the cookbook →
— ◆ ◆ ◆ —

Get all three — the Carthage Magazine bundle.

Travel guide, phrasebook, and cookbook — the full three-book project at a meaningful discount.

$49.97 $39.99 Save $9.98
Get the bundle
About the publisher

Carthage Magazine

Tunisia’s first and largest premier English-speaking general-interest publication. Carthage Magazine uncovers the country’s rich culture, innovative spirit, and vibrant civil society — redefining the conversation about Tunisia and the wider MENA region.