Nigel Dennis Biography

Nigel Dennis, Writer
Born asNigel Forbes Dennis
Occup.Writer
FromUnited Kingdom
BornJanuary 16, 1912
Surrey, England
DiedJuly 19, 1989
Gloucestershire, United Kingdom
Aged77 years
Early Life
Nigel Dennis was born upon January 16, 1912, in Bletchingley, Surrey, England, to Colonel Algernon Dennis, a British Army policeman, and also his other half, Dorothy Dennis. He spent most of his early life living in numerous countries including Southern Rhodesia (currently Zimbabwe), Egypt, and Ireland because of his papa's postings. These travels revealed him to varied cultures and also viewpoints, which later on came to be significant in his writing.

Dennis attended several institutions across the British Isles, including the Portora Royal School in Enniskillen, Northern Ireland, as well as Stowe School in Buckinghamshire, England. However, he did not complete his formal researches, and also rather, he sought his interests in literary works and writing.

Occupation Beginnings
In 1930, at the age of 18, Dennis began his creating career as a reporter for the Daily Express, a British newspaper. There, he worked under popular editors like Arthur Christiansen and exercised his wit, intellect, as well as discourse on both nationwide and also international events. While functioning as a reporter, he also had the opportunity to meeting as well as connect with numerous significant personalities.

Throughout the 1930s, Dennis diversified his writing by dabbling in theatre as a dramatist. He also penned a number of unpublished novels throughout this period. However, it was only after World War II that he ultimately located success as a fiction writer.

World War II and also Writing Success
When World War II burst out, Dennis enlisted in the British Army, serving as a cryptographer in the Intelligence Corps. His wartime experiences provided him with a much deeper understanding of national politics, power struggles, as well as human inspirations, later on ending up being crucial components in his literary works.

After the war, Dennis produced a number of seriously well-known plays and also novels. His very first effective play was "The Man Who Understood Women" (1945), which was organized in London's West End theatre district. Dennis came to be increasingly thinking about discovering the human subconscious via his jobs, often integrating aspects of witticism and also black comedy.

Literary Works and also Legacy
Dennis accomplished conclusive success as a writer in the mid-1950s with his unique "Cards of Identity" (1955), which satirized British society, identification formation, and psychoanalysis. This work established him as a noticeable satirist of his time, drawing comparisons to literary giants such as Aldous Huxley as well as George Orwell.

He additionally developed his credibility as a satirist with his 1960 play, "August for the People", a provocative, politically billed dramatization that challenged traditional values.

Throughout his occupation, Dennis was a respected writer, generating numerous plays, novels, and also essays. Several of his significant jobs include "Boys and also Girls Come Out to Play" (1949), "A House in Order" (1966), "A Sea Change" (1971), as well as "The Making of Moo" (1957).

Dennis likewise acted as a literary movie critic and editor for journals as well as magazines such as The Spectator, Encounter, and New Statesman. He was known for his insightful, terse evaluations as well as commentaries, which contributed considerably to British literary discourse.

Personal Life as well as Later Years
Nigel Dennis married twice throughout his life. He initially wed Marjorie Richards in 1936, with whom he had a son and a little girl. The pair divorced in 1960, after which he wed radio starlet Frances Clare Mathews. They continued to be married up until Dennis's fatality.

In his later years, he retired to a silent life in Gloucestershire, among England's most relaxing and also stunning areas. Dennis died on August 19, 1989, at the age of 77. Regardless of not achieving enormous commercial success, his jobs remain to be admired for their intellectual prowess, wit, as well as extensive understanding of the human condition.

Our collection contains 19 quotes who is written / told by Nigel.

Related authors: Aldous Huxley (Novelist), Arthur Christiansen (Journalist), Lawrence Taylor (Athlete), Ice T (Musician), George Orwell (Author)

Nigel Dennis Famous Works:
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19 Famous quotes by Nigel Dennis

Small: I think few wives would have encouraged this kind of drastic and reckless career shift!
"I think few wives would have encouraged this kind of drastic and reckless career shift!"
Small: All I really wanted to do was wildlife photography
"All I really wanted to do was wildlife photography"
Small: Photography started as a means of getting reference material for my paintings of nature subjects
"Photography started as a means of getting reference material for my paintings of nature subjects"
Small: I would never dream, for example, of going to The States to photograph your wildlife
"I would never dream, for example, of going to The States to photograph your wildlife"
Small: Even for an area I know well, I prepare a shooting list of subjects I need
"Even for an area I know well, I prepare a shooting list of subjects I need"
Small: In The States I would have no edge, no advantage at all
"In The States I would have no edge, no advantage at all"
Small: I carry a notebook full of sketches of pictures I want to take - they are really scruffy sketches, but
"I carry a notebook full of sketches of pictures I want to take - they are really scruffy sketches, but at least I am going out there with a clear objective"
Small: So about twenty years ago I gave up on painting - and got into terrible debt after buying a load of cam
"So about twenty years ago I gave up on painting - and got into terrible debt after buying a load of camera gear!"
Small: For the first few years we lived in a tiny rented cottage at the bottom of a friends garden. We often j
"For the first few years we lived in a tiny rented cottage at the bottom of a friend's garden. We often joked that there was plenty of film in the fridge, but not too much food!"
Small: Currently I am working on another three books, doing a lot of magazine work, am shooting for fifteen st
"Currently I am working on another three books, doing a lot of magazine work, am shooting for fifteen stock agencies, plus my own photo library - all this keeps me quite busy!"
Small: A large wildlife book, start to finish, could take one to two years, but then I would expect to get sev
"A large wildlife book, start to finish, could take one to two years, but then I would expect to get several good (nature) magazine features off the back of this, plus of course a lot of stock"
Small: The Kalahari is brilliant - and easy to visit
"The Kalahari is brilliant - and easy to visit"
Small: My first serious project was photographing badgers - very, very difficult as they are shy and nocturnal
"My first serious project was photographing badgers - very, very difficult as they are shy and nocturnal"
Small: I hope to goodness I would not still be working in the corporate world - the money is OK but it is no l
"I hope to goodness I would not still be working in the corporate world - the money is OK but it is no life at all"
Small: I also like flyfishing - maybe I would have figured a way to make a living out of that?
"I also like flyfishing - maybe I would have figured a way to make a living out of that?"
Small: Big game photography in Africa is mainly done from a vehicle, so then I feel I might as well take the l
"Big game photography in Africa is mainly done from a vehicle, so then I feel I might as well take the lot"
Small: I also had a tremendous passion for art and read a lot
"I also had a tremendous passion for art and read a lot"
Small: I concentrate on the southern African subcontinent
"I concentrate on the southern African subcontinent"
Small: For sure, all over Poland, kids had my picture of a lemur on their bedroom wall - but the chances are t
"For sure, all over Poland, kids had my picture of a lemur on their bedroom wall - but the chances are they may never get to see a real lemur in Madagascar. I thought this was great and it really meant a lot to me"