Charles Nicholl (author)

Charles Nicholl is an English author specializing in works of history, biography, literary detection, and travel. His subjects have included Christopher Marlowe, Arthur Rimbaud, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Nashe and William Shakespeare. Besides his literary output, Nicholl has also presented documentary programmes on television. In 1974 he was the winner of the Sunday Times Young Writer Award for his account of an LSD trip entitled 'The Ups and The Downs'.

Nicholl was educated at King's College, Cambridge, and is a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He has lectured in Britain, Italy and the United States. He lives in Lucchesia in Italy with his wife and children.[1] He also lectures on Martin Randall Travel tours.[2]

Selected works

  • A Cup of News – a biography of Thomas Nashe
  • The Reckoning: The Murder of Christopher Marlowe (1992 winner of the James Tait Black Prize for biography and the CWA Gold Dagger for Non-Fiction)
  • Somebody Else: Arthur Rimbaud in Africa (1998 winner of the Hawthornden Prize)
  • Leonardo da Vinci: Flights of the Mind
  • The Lodger: Shakespeare on Silver Street
  • The Fruit Palace
  • Borderlines (1988)
gollark: We have a bad BT consumer router thing at home, which has a disappointing lack of graphs and indeed any status monitoring features whatsoever.
gollark: My server's status monitoring page has several hundred graphs in it, about ten of which are useful.
gollark: Hmm, graphs, those are always fun.
gollark: > <@!258639553357676545>> If you really want a good example, how about the JS you run when you access this site? How about the JS that is run when accessing other sites? A lot of them could use static or server side dynamically generated pages as opposed to JS.<@474726021652807680> A lot of time that's for development convenience as opposed to anything else. Or so it can actually respond in reasonable time to input and stuff.
gollark: DRM is inherently broken, it'll always run into this if people are dedicated enough.

References

  1. Boyd Tonkin, Charles Nicholl: Low life, high art, The Independent
  2. Martin Randall Travel, Expert Lecturers, ,


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