About the Author:
Anthony Sattin is the author of several highly acclaimed books, including Lifting the Veil, The Pharaoh's Shadow and The Gates of Africa. He discovered and edited two exceptional manuscripts, Harriet Tytler's unique memoir of the Indian Mutiny of 1857, and Florence Nightingale's letters home from her journey of self-discovery up the Nile in 1849-1850. He has also edited a collection of stories, A House Somewhere, Tales of Life Abroad. With an MA in Creative Writing from the University of East Anglia, Anthony has also published fiction, both in anthology and book form. For the past decade, he has been a regular reviewer of non-fiction -primarily for the Sunday Times, for whom he wrote a weekly book column for seven years. His journalism and travel writing have also appeared in a range of publications, including the Sunday Times, Daily Telegraph, Financial Times, Independent, Guardian, Spectator and Conde Nast Traveller. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and sits on the editorial board of Geographical Magazine. He was recently named one of ten key influences in travel writing by Conde Nast Traveller and was runner-up in the 2007 Travel Writer of the Year awards. As a broadcaster, he has made many appearances on both radio and television. His TV work began with his presenting an arts magazine programme and has since included appearances talking about the rediscovery of ancient Egypt on BBC1, BBC2 and the Discovery Channel. His radio work includes acclaimed documentaries for Radio 4 on Florence Nightingale in Egypt and on The Pharaoh's Music. Anthony is also a regular speaker at literary festivals and societies around the UK.
Review:
"Elegant and absorbing, A Winter On The Nile sheds fresh light upon two titans of the age" -- Tim Butcher, author of BLOOD RIVER "Perhaps the most seductive of all Egyptian travelogues. Anthony Sattin, an inveterate Egyptian traveller and a masterful storyteller, conducts us elegantly into the company of two of the greatest names of the nineteenth century as they voyaged through Egypt on a journey that would forever alter both their lives; a journey made all the more piquant by the fact that each was entirely unaware of the presence of the other" -- Justin Pollard, author of THE RISE AND FALL OF ALEXANDRIA "Beguiling and impressively researched ... A compelling snapshot of two of the most celebrated figures of the age, before their fame, and of a time when travel was leisurely and scholarly. And it sings with the romance of Egypt" Traveller Magazine "If this doesn't win a major book prize, I will eat my sola topi ... Beautifully counterpoints the spiritual travel experiences of the soon-to-be-famous nurse fleeing an arranged marriage, with the much more lubricious ones of the then-unpublished novelist." -- Giles Foden Conde Nast Traveller "An exquisite work of biography" History Today
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