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  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham015_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham017_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham006_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham007_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham005_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham019_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham014_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham011_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham04_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham02_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham018_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham012_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham010_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham009_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham004_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham001_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham03_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham016_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham003_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham06_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham013_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham008_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham has lived for extended periods in Japan, India and Italy during a distinguished career as author, foreign correspondent and feature writer. Tokyo: the City at the End of the World (Kodansha International), his phantasmagoric account of Tokyo in the booming ‘Eighties, became a cult hit and was translated into Japanese. On the staff of The Independent for more than 20 years, he reported from four continents for The Independent Magazine and in 1991 paid his first visit to Burma as an undercover reporter. Later, as the paper’s South Asia correspondent, he was one of the first journalists to interview Aung San Suu Kyi after her release from detention in 2002, and met her again in 2011 and 2012. He has visited Burma on several other occasions, reporting the Saffron Revolution in 2007 and being deported in 2010, shortly before the general election. His authoritative and highly readable biography of Aung San Suu Kyi, The Lady and the Peacock, was published by Rider in the UK in 2010 and was  a critical and popular success. It has since been published by The Experiment in the US and translated into Dutch, Chinese, Japanese and Korean. 1st March 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by David Sandison/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    popham002_20160301_dsa.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham07_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham05_20160823_gyd.JPG
  • Peter Popham, the Irish journalist and author, at the Edinburgh International Book Festival. Edinburgh, Scotland.<br />
23rd August 2016<br />
<br />
Photograph by Gary Doak/Writer Pictures<br />
<br />
WORLD RIGHTS
    Popham01_20160823_gyd.JPG