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Books/book club

Beverley Nichols

(19 Posts)
hollysteers Tue 09-May-23 09:45:39

Anyone enjoy the works of this author?
I’m currently reading ‘A Village in a Valley” with lovely illustrations by Rex Whistler, tragically killed in WW2.
Nichols is very old fashioned, but I find him a lighthearted cosy read.

Callistemon21 Tue 09-May-23 09:51:42

I've not read his books but the name instantly brought back memories - didn't he write a column in a women's magazine? My mother used to buy that magazine and I used to read his column when I was a young girl.
Mum read his books, too, I think.

nanna8 Tue 09-May-23 09:52:42

My Mum loved him and my Dad loathed him. I won’t say how my Dad described him but it wasn’t nice. Dad was a mild mannered sort of man so I always wondered if he had actually met him and had some sort of argument with him.

Anniebach Tue 09-May-23 09:58:06

He was homosexual , age about 60 when homosexuality was made legal

Grandma70s Tue 09-May-23 10:10:25

I loved his books when I was in my teens. Some were light pleasant stuff about gardens, but he also wrote a serious anti war book called Cry Havoc, which influenced me greatly. He also liked cats, as I do.

Callistemon21 Tue 09-May-23 10:14:06

Grandma70s

I loved his books when I was in my teens. Some were light pleasant stuff about gardens, but he also wrote a serious anti war book called Cry Havoc, which influenced me greatly. He also liked cats, as I do.

Oh yes, that might have been the picture in the women's magazine, Beverley with a cat.

Ilovecheese Tue 09-May-23 10:17:14

I enjoyed "The Tree that Sat Down" when I was a child but have not read any of his adult books.
I don't see his sexuality as in any way relevant and don't see why it should be mentioned.

Anniebach Tue 09-May-23 10:27:04

I think the treatment of homosexuals pre 1967 should not be forgotten,

Aldom Tue 09-May-23 10:39:04

Anniebach

I think the treatment of homosexuals pre 1967 should not be forgotten,

Absolutely Annie. Well said.

Chocolatelovinggran Tue 09-May-23 10:44:19

nannna8- I'm with your Dad. I thought him a little bit creepy. Perhaps, now, with hindsight, I can see that he was leading a sad life.

Anniebach Tue 09-May-23 10:44:27

Thank you Aldom if we do not speak of it it will be forgotten,

fatgran57 Tue 09-May-23 10:47:33

I loved his book "Merry Hall" which I bought from a secondhand book exchange when I was quite young and I still have it some 60 years later!

nanna8 Tue 09-May-23 11:02:26

I looked him up and it said he was a pacifist. My dad flew aircraft in the RAF during the 2nd world war so that may well have upset him.

Grandma70s Tue 09-May-23 11:09:33

Yes, he was a pacifist. That’s what his book Cry Havoc was about. His arguments were very convincing, based on his knowledge of the first world war.

If only everybody was a pacifist……

Grandma70s Tue 09-May-23 11:16:01

Chocolatelovinggran

nannna8- I'm with your Dad. I thought him a little bit creepy. Perhaps, now, with hindsight, I can see that he was leading a sad life.

I doubt if he led a sad life. He had a partner, as many prominent homosexuals did, in spite of the law. Brave men.

hollysteers Wed 10-May-23 09:57:32

He certainly doesn’t sound sad in the book I am presently reading, he’s full of zest for life.
Maybe this biography will enlighten me, sent to me by a fan:
,

eazybee Wed 10-May-23 11:23:19

I have his book For Adults Only, a series of conversations between hapless adults and their obnoxious children, who always come out on top. Very amusing, still pertinent although dated, published in 1932.
He wasn't treated as badly as Oscar Wilde.

FarNorth Wed 10-May-23 11:41:09

I doubt if he led a sad life. He had a partner, as many prominent homosexuals did, in spite of the law. Brave men.

It must have been very difficult to live in the awareness of society's attitudes and must have caused sadness.

Juno56 Wed 10-May-23 12:10:10

Beverly Nichols' memoir Father Figure about his monster of an alcoholic father is worth a read.