Robert Twigger is a British author. He travels widely but divides his time mostly between the UK and Egypt.
Life
Twigger was educated at Balliol College, Oxford University. He initially studied engineering, but after six weeks switched to politics and philosophy. He won the Newdigate Prize for poetry. He also staged a film festival for student films, as well as directing two films himself. Following university, he worked in the publicity department of a record company and taught English and studied martial arts in Japan for three years. After that he travelled widely in remote places for a number of years. He stood in the 2001 general election in the Oxford West and Abingdon constituency, receiving 93 votes. Twigger has written fiction and non-fiction books, as well as articles for newspapers and magazines including The Daily Telegraph, The Sunday Times, Lonely Planet magazine, Maxim, the Financial Times and Esquire.
Big Snake: The Hunt for the World's Longest Python describes Twigger's failed attempt to capture a record-breaking 30-foot snake for a $50,000 prize being offered by a New York zoo.
The Extinction Club is an account of Twigger's research into the Milu, a species of deer which was thought to have become extinct.
' describes Twigger's thoughts and observations on the nature of masculinity and its current state at the beginning of the 21st century.
Voyageur – Across the Rocky Mountains in a Birchbark Canoe recounts the story of Twigger's three-year, two thousand-mile journey across North West Canada in the wake of eighteenth-century explorer and fur traderAlexander Mackenzie.
' is a desert adventure modelled on explorers such as Theodore Almasy.
In 1997 Twigger's expedition to North Borneo and Kalimantan discovered a line of menhirs across a vast stretch of jungle never before recorded. Twigger's failed attempt to capture a record-breaking snake in Indonesia in 1997 was the subject of a Channel 4 documentary, entitled Big Snake along with Twigger's book on the expedition. In the documentary, Twigger is criticised by his translator for employing indigenous people to do the majority of the work whilst omitting to inform many of them about the $50,000 prize he was seeking for himself. In 2004 Twigger led an expedition that completed a three-season, two-thousand-mile journey across North West Canada in the wake of eighteenth-century explorer and fur trader Alexander Mackenzie. The team were the first to successfully complete this route in a birchbark canoe since 1793. Of all those who took part only Twigger completed the whole route. In 2005 Twigger and Steve Mann made the first exploration of the Western Desert using a hand hauled wheeled trolley during which they discovered the tracks of László Almásy's baby Ford expedition of the 1930s. Since 2006 Twigger has made regular desert journeys with the expedition group "The Explorer School". In 2009–2010 he became the first person to walk the entire 700 km of the Egyptian Great Sand Sea, following the route of German explorer Gerhard Rolhfs across the Egyptian Sahara.