SIR WILFRED THESIGER, last of the great gentleman adventurers, was, in the words of David Attenborough, 'one of the very few people who in our time could be put on the pedestal of the great explorers of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.'
Born at the British Legation in 1910 in Addis Ababa, Thesiger spent his early years in Abyssinia. He was educated at Eton and Oxford and in 1930, aged twenty, attended the coronation of Haile Selassie at the Emperor's personal invitation. Throughout his life he journeyed through some of the remotest, most dangerous areas of Africa, the Middle East and Asia, witnessing and photographing fast-changing cultures to great acclaim. His many inspiring travels involved explorations in Ethiopia, wartime service with the SOE and the SAS, crossings of the Empty Quarter of Arabia, sojourns in the Iraqi marshes and many loyal and sometimes turbulent friendships. During the 1960s he travelled extensively in East Africa, and from 1978 he spent the greater part of each year living among the pastoral Samburu in Kenya, until retiring to England in 1994. He was knighted in 1995 and died in 2003, aged ninety-three. His books, including Arabian Sands (1959) and The Marsh Arabs (1964), have been hailed as classics of modern travel writing.
Published to coincide with the centenary of Wilfred Thesiger's birth and a major exhibition at the Pitt Rivers Museum, this book is a moving celebration of Thesiger's enduring relationship with the African continent, and his fascination with its peoples and landscapes. Containing around two hundred photographs from Thesiger's personal archive, many of them previously unpublished, these essays explore and evaluate his lifetime of exploration and travel in Africa, as well as, for the first time, his photographic practice and its legacy as a museum collection.
I was traveling in Kenya in July-August /1994 when I first cane across a Thesiger book MY KENYA DAYS, then on display at a book shop adjacent to the (New) Stanley Hotel. After reading this, I collected all other works by Thesiger and enjoyed reading his wonderful tales of travel and exploration. I had met and spoken to people who knew him, and was saddened when he had
to leave his beloved Maralal, but was thrilled when he was knighted. He was indeed the last of the great explorers.
dragonlancet 4 months ago
I remember when Thesiger died in 2003, I was saddened-- he was one of the last "true" explorer.I have read all his books and await this copy eagerly. Exploration these days has become so "high tech" ,alienated from local and indigenous wisdom of finding one's way,and in the end , finding oneself
ytfanable 1 year ago
Many thanks for posting this, can't wait to get a copy.
2210ethan 1 year ago