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The Bridge Between Worlds with Gavin Francis

Tuesday 24th September

Venue
The Royal Scots Club, 29-31 Abercromby Pl, Edinburgh EH3 6QE
Doors Open
7pm
Start Time
7.30pm
francis

After last year's event discussing Free for All, GP and award-winning writer Gavin Francis joins us once again to celebrate his latest. This time, Gavin has applied his unparalleled insight to a bridge-filled travelogue, The Bridge Between Worlds: A Brief History of Connection.

The Bridge Between Worlds

In a world increasingly preoccupied by borders, bridges celebrate the possibility of connection, allowing the flow of goods, people and ideas. Bridges are among our grandest physical structures with the power of transforming lives and economies, but we also stand (or fall) upon the simple arch of bones in our feet. Text is a bridge between writer and reader, and conversation builds bridges of understanding between minds.

Dr Gavin Francis has spent his life fascinated by the power of bridges to improve human connection. In The Bridge Between Worlds he examines bridges both actual and metaphorical, on a journey through more than twenty countries, across four decades of travel.

From Rome's Ponte Sant'Angelo to Brooklyn, Victoria Falls to London, Singapore to Siberia, this thought-provoking book reflects on connections between nations and between individuals. Francis demonstrates what the building of bridges has meant to our civilisation, how crossings can enrich our lives, and the price we pay when we tear them down.

About Gavin Francis

Gavin Francis is an award-winning writer and GP. He is the author of ten non-fiction books, including Adventures in Human Being which was a Sunday Times bestseller and won the Saltire Scottish Non-Fiction Book of the Year Award; Empire Antarctica, which won Scottish Book of the Year in the SMIT Awards and was shortlisted for both the Ondaatje and Costa Prizes; and Recovery: The Lost Art of Convalescence, which was a Sunday Times bestseller. He has written for the Guardian, The Times, the New York Review of Books and the London Review of Books. His work has been translated into eighteen languages.

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