- Robert Twigger
Infobox Writer
name = Robert Twigger
imagesize = 100px
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pseudonym =
birthdate = Birth date and age|1964|31|12|mf=y
birthplace =Brno
deathdate =
deathplace =
occupation = Writer, documentary maker
nationality =
period =
genre =
subject = Travel, exploration, adventure, cross-cultural studies
movement =
spouse = Samia Hosny
partner =
children = 2
relatives =
influences = Travel writersSir Richard Burton ,Samuel White Baker ,Francis Galton , SirWilfred Thesiger ,Norman Lewis ,Bruce Chatwin .
website = http://www.roberttwigger.comRobert Twigger (born in
Brno ) is a Britishwriter andnovelist .Career
Robert Twigger is best known for his book about living and doing martial arts in
Japan : entitled "Angry White Pyjamas", it has earned numerous awards, and in 2007, all 5,000Waterstones Bookshop staff voted it the best sports book of the last 25 years, beating such favourites asNick Hornby 's Fever Pitch. Twigger has written fiction and non-fiction. His novel "Dr Ragab's Universal Language" is set in the city ofCairo where he lives. He has won theSomerset Maugham Award and theNewdigate Prize – the world's oldest poetry award still in existence, whose previous winners have includedOscar Wilde andJohn Ruskin .Educated in arts and sciences, Robert Twigger studied
Engineering briefly atBalliol College ,Oxford , before changing toPhilosophy . In the late 1980s he made severalunderground film s and worked on theRaymond Briggs feature "When the Wind Blows". He left the United Kingdom in 1991 and traveled and lived abroad for much of the next six years, in Japan,Indonesia ,India andFrance .His short work "Zenslacker Manifesto", inspired partly by
Zen and other teachings, was praised by "The Idler" founderTom Hodgkinson as "Brilliant. Very wise." A substantial part of "Zenslacker" was subsequently published in "The Idler".In addition to having written six
non-fiction /autobiographical travel books, he also writes articles fornewspapers andmagazines such as the "Daily Telegraph ", "Maxim" and "Esquire", and this area of his work has led him to train inbullfighting inSpain and report onchain gang s inArizona .The autobiographical sequence that begins with "Angry White Pyjamas" and ends with "Lost Oasis" whilst using the conventional format of the travel book is a sustained meditation on such subjects as authenticity, the need for adventure and the role of the
polymath .His interest in polymathy has lead to a detailed study of the subject. One result of this is the polymathic main character Dr Ragab in the novel of the same name.
In talks he has given on "Lifeshifting", Twigger has emphasised the need to centre one's life around meaning-driven motives rather than financial or status-driven motivation. Drawing on his experiences working with indigenous peoples from around the world, he has spoken on 'work tribes' and 'modern nomadism'. Using material derived from studies in polymathy he has also taught various methods of rapid learning.
A Channel 4 documentary, entitled "Big Snake", was made of his journey to
Indonesia where he captured the world's longest snake, a reticulated python.In 2004 he completed an epic three-year, two-thousand-mile journey across North West
Canada in the wake of eighteenth-century explorer and trapperAlexander Mackenzie . Twigger and his team were the first to successfully complete this route since 1793.In 2005 and 2006 he spent several months in the
Sahara Desert searching for lost oases. He makes regular desert journeys with the expedition group "The Explorer School".He has published several poetry collections including one in 2003 with Nobel prize winner
Doris Lessing .elected works
*"
Angry White Pyjamas " (1997), an account of his year spent training at theYoshinkan Aikido Hombu Dojo inTokyo ,Japan . (The book won theSomerset Maugham Award and theWilliam Hill Sports Book of the Year in 1998).
*"Big Snake" (1999), the story of his journey toIndonesia to attempt to capture the longestsnake in the world.
*"The Extinction Club" (2001), an account of Twigger's research into the Milu, a species ofdeer which was thought to have becomeextinct .
*"Being a Man (in the lousy modern world)" (2002), Twigger's thoughts and observations on the nature ofmasculinity and its current state at the beginning of the21st-century .
*"Voyageur - Across the Rocky Mountains in a Birchbark Canoe" (2006), the story of his three year epic, two thousand mile journey across North West Canada in the wake of eighteenth century explorer and trapper Alexander Mackenzie.
*"Lost Oasis: A Desert Adventure: In Search Of Paradise" (2007), in search of paradise: a desert adventure in the footsteps of seasoned explorers such as Theodore Almasy (the inspiration for The English Patient) who tried to locate the lost oasis of Zezura, reportedly home to hordes of treasure, flocks of birds and a lush, verdant valley.
*"Real Men Eat Puffer Fish" (2008) – humorous yet workable advice – a kind of dangerous book for men.External links
* [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/ news item]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9504EEDE1330F932A15754C0A9649C8B63 Review of "Extinction Club"]
* [http://www.roberttwigger.com Twigger's Website]
* [http://www.theexplorerschool.com The Explorer School]
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