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Talwar by Robert Carter
Talwar by Robert  Carter








Talwar by Robert Carter

Travelling in Manchuria in the depths of winter was no picnic. When I wrote Barbarians which is set in 19th century China, I had to go and take a look myself. I finally settled in London, but I still like to head off to interesting parts when time allows.Īs for my books, I like to write about dramatic and exciting events and I feel I owe it to my readers to have had some sort of first-hand experience. Four years later, I left BBC TV to write. After traveling around most of India, Sri Lanka and Indonesia, I returned home and took up a job with the BBC. In Hong Kong, I worked on a road survey, took tea with the heir of the last king of Upper Burma near Mandalay, and on the path to Everest base camp just happened to run into Sir Edmund Hillary. From there I took the Trans-Siberian railway to Japan. When I left the oilfields, I spent time on travel, first to East Berlin and Warsaw, then to Moscow and Leningrad. It was dangerous work, but well-paid, and it took me to places that outsiders rarely see, like the Rub-al-Khali of Arabia and hard-to-reach parts of equatorial Africa. I was aboard the Ron Tappmeyer, a rig that blew out in the Persian Gulf, killing 19 men. Writing novels has always played a part in my life, and I've tried to see the world enough to be able to write fiction with the help of personal experience.Īfter university, the US oil industry was booming so I went to Dallas, Texas, later on I worked on rigs in various parts of the Middle East and the war-torn heart of Africa. I studied astrophysics at Newcastle University, where I started the student science fiction society. I was born in Staffordshire, near Etruria, the place made famous by Josiah Wedgwood, but was brought up in Sydney, Australia and later in Lancashire, England.










Talwar by Robert  Carter