Graham Boynton is a British-Zimbabwean journalist, consultant, travel writer and editor.
Boynton began a career in journalism as a political reporter during the Rhodesian Bush War. His reportage in South Africa led to the apartheid government declaring him an 'undesirable alien,' after which they deported him. He subsequently established himself in London, writing for international magazines. In the mid-1980s, he was appointed editor of Business Traveller magazine. In 1988, he moved to New York City where he worked as a writer and editor for Condé Nast Publications for ten years. He was an editor at Condé Nast Traveler and a contracted writer for Vanity Fair. He also wrote for a number of other publications in America and the UK.
In 1998, he returned to the UK to become the travel editor of the Daily Telegraph and Sunday Telegraph. A year earlier, he published Last Days in Cloud Cuckooland about the end of white minority rule in South Africa. African Sunset Business Week. 15 September 1997 It was named as one of the Washington Post Best Non Fiction Books of 1998. He was Group Travel Editor of the Telegraph Media Group from 1998 to December 2011.
He also regularly contributes pieces about Zimbabwe. Ian Smith has sadly been proved right The Telegraph. 22 November 2007 "Telegraph Christmas Appeal: we must not forget Zimbabwe", Telegraph.co.uk, 27 November 2010. Zimbabwe tourism: should we go back?, Telegraph.co.uk, 24 September 2010.
Boynton's latest book, Wild: The Life of Peter Beard: Photographer, Adventurer, Lover, was published in October 2022.
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