• Theroux is set to continue on the trail of the weird into another series.

    BBC: The wizard of weirdness

  • For Theroux, the Lake Victoria crossing embodied the simple pleasure of independent travel.

    BBC: Africa��s path less sailed

  • This morning, there's a live Web chat with the Theroux at 8am ET via The Telegraph.

    BBC: In brief: Ash cloud threatens UK flights

  • Paul Theroux, a hard-to-please American travel writer, experienced French intractability at first hand on the Orient Express.

    ECONOMIST: For some, France is still on the other side of the earth

  • Theroux ends up having to present a live infomercial himself, something he readily admits was a nerve-wracking event.

    BBC: The wizard of weirdness

  • Justin Theroux plays the resident stud, Seth, the essence of every creepy sex-and-drugs hustler since peyote hit Northern California.

    NEWYORKER: Wanderlust

  • David Theroux, president of the Independent Institute, said that "anybody who stoops to whatever was done here, cannot be trusted".

    BBC: Oracle defends Microsoft spying

  • As Mr. Theroux eventually unnecessarily and endearingly explains, his book is as much about him as it is about Estonia.

    WSJ: Book Review: Estonia

  • In the first episode Theroux investigates the world of the infomercial by visiting a 24 hour shopping channel in Florida.

    BBC: The wizard of weirdness

  • Stiller not only stars in the film but also directed it and wrote the script, with Etan Cohen and Justin Theroux.

    NEWYORKER: Tropic Thunder

  • The musings of classical poets such as Li Bai appear alongside those of 20th- century travel writers such as Paul Theroux.

    CNN: River Prose

  • Former Beirut hostage John McCarthy will speak about his travels through Israel and Palestine and Paul Theroux on a journey alone through Africa.

    BBC: Hans Blix, Miranda Hart and Carl Bernstein

  • More strangely still, Mr. Theroux says little about the fraught relations between ethnic Estonians and the large Russian minority that Soviet rule left behind.

    WSJ: Book Review: Estonia

  • Paul Theroux may be America's most critically acclaimed travel writer, having published more than a dozen travel books since his genre-defining 1975 book The Great Railway Bazaar.

    BBC: In brief: Ash cloud threatens UK flights

  • Casualties are few, unless you're like British novelist Marcel Theroux.

    WSJ: Who Needs a WeedWacker When You Can Use a Scythe?

  • But despite his discomfort, Theroux would rather swing than sing.

    BBC: The wizard of weirdness

  • Both Mr Theroux, and Mr Berthoud, of the National Taxpayers Union, said they had advocated free market policies well before the Microsoft case, although they did admit receiving funds from the company.

    BBC: Oracle defends Microsoft spying

  • The weddings or rumored nuptials of three other couples Kim Kardashian and Kris Humphries, Jennifer Aniston and Justin Theroux, and Sandra Bullock and Ryan Reynolds made the top five of at least one of the top titles.

    WSJ: Hot Covers! One Prince, Three Sisters, Lots of Breakups

  • But like the country's many invaders Russians and Germans, and, before them, Swedes and Danes Mr. Theroux largely uses Estonia as a space for his own purposes, transforming this admirable country into a grotesque but clever caricature perfect for use as a foil.

    WSJ: Book Review: Estonia

  • Mr. Theroux is evidently appalled by the tyranny imposed on Estonia by Stalin in the wake of the 1940 annexation and, again, in nightmare reprise, upon its "liberation" from brutal Nazi occupation in 1944, even if he skimps on illustrations of the savagery involved.

    WSJ: Book Review: Estonia

  • The urban landscape depicted by Paul Theroux in his classic 1986 novel O-Zone, where the rich live in artificial "green" enclaves protected by private corporate armies from the environmentally devastated areas surrounding them that are populated by the rest, will soon move from fiction to fact.

    BBC: NEWS | In Depth | Viewpoints: The urban world in 2050

  • Thus, after noting the Estonian language's "primitive cast, " Mr. Theroux turns his attention to Lord Monboddo, an 18th-century sage who believed that apes were essentially humans without the power of speech, enjoyably esoteric information that tells us little about Estonia but a lot about Mr. Theroux's magpie mind.

    WSJ: Book Review: Estonia

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