Nigel Nicolson OBE (19 January 1917 – 23
September 2004) was a British writer, publisher and
politician.
Nicolson was the son of the writers Sir
Harold Nicolson and
Vita Sackville-West; he had a brother
Ben, later an art historian.
The boys
grew up in Kent
, first near
their mother's ancestral home at Knole
and then at
Sissinghurst
Castle
, where their parents created a famous
garden. Nicolson was sent away from home at a young
age, as was the custom of the time, to be educated at Summer Fields
, a prep
school in Oxford
; Eton College
; and Balliol College, Oxford
. He served with the
Grenadier Guards during
World War II, later writing their official
history.
Nicolson wrote many books and founded with
George Weidenfeld the firm
Weidenfeld and Nicolson, of which he
was a director from 1948 to 1992. He also worked as a broadcaster
and was a member of the Ancient Monuments Board.
Although
his father had been first a National
Labour and then a Labour
politician, Nigel Nicolson became active in the Conservative Party and contested
Leicester
North West in 1950 and Falmouth and Camborne
in 1951, without success. He was elected
Member of Parliament for
Bournemouth
East and Christchurch at a by-election in February 1952, when
the previous MP, Brendan Bracken, was
elevated to the House of
Lords
. Nicolson was re-elected in the seat in the
general election
of May 1955. However, he was uncomfortable within the Tory
party and voted with Labour to abolish
hanging and abstained in a
vote of confidence in the government over
the
Suez War. His
constituency association called for
him to resign and wrote to the
Prime
Minister briefing against their MP. A ballot of members was
called. Unfortunately for Nicolson, a scandal relating to his
publishing interests broke at the same time — the company's
publication of
Vladimir Nabokov's
novel
Lolita. Nicolson lost the
members' vote and was forced to step down at the
general election of
October 1959.
Nicolson returned to writing, particularly on heritage and
biography. He co-wrote a celebrated 1973 book on his parents,
Portrait of a
Marriage. It balanced a frank account of his
bisexual parents' extramarital affairs (especially
Vita Sackville-West's '
elopement' with
Violet
Trefusis) with their enduring love for each other; it caused an
uproar when it was published. He also edited his father's diaries
and, with Joanne Trautmann, the letters of Virginia Woolf. Later he
wrote
The Spectator's Long
Life column and a Time of My Life column for
The Sunday Telegraph. His
autobiography,
Long Life, was published in 1997.
In 1953 Nicolson married Philippa, the daughter of
Sir Gervais Tennyson-d'Eyncourt,
and they had two daughters, Rebecca, a publisher, Juliet, a
historian, and a son,
Adam, a writer.
They divorced in 1970.
Bibliography
- The Grenadier Guards in the War of 1939–1945 (1949)
with Patrick Forbes
- Lord of the Isles (1960) on Lord Leverhulme
- People and Parliament (1958)
- The United Nations: A Reply
to Its Critics (1963)
- Sissinghurst Castle (1964)
- Great Houses of Britain (1965)
- Diaries & Letters of Harold
Nicolson (1966-8) three volumes, editor
- Great Houses of The Western World (1968)
- Alex: The Life of Field Marshal Earl
Alexander of Tunis (1973)
- Portrait of a
Marriage (1973)
- Letters of Virginia
Woolf (1975-1980) six volumes, editor
- The Himalayas (1975)
- Mary Curzon (1977)
- The National Trust Book of Great Houses in Britain
(1978)
- Napoleon 1812 (1985)
- Lady Curzon's India: Letters of a Vicereine
(1986)
- Two Roads to Dodge City (1986) with Adam Nicolson
- The Village in History (1988) with Graham Nicholson
and Jane Fawcett
- Counties of Britain: A Tudor Atlas by John Speed (1989) with Alasdair
Hawkyard
- The World of Jane Austen
(1991)
- Vita And Harold : The Letters Of Vita Sackville-West And
Harold Nicolson (1992) editor
- A Long Life: Memoirs (1998)
- Kent (1999)
- Virginia Woolf, part of
the Penguin Lives biography series
(2000)
- Fanny Burney: The Mother of
English Fiction (2002)
- The Queen and Us : The Second Elizabethan Age
(2003)
- Vita Sackville-West : Selected Writings (2003) editor
with Mary Ann Caws
References
External links