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・ Nigel Mitchell
・ Nigel Mobbs
・ Nigel Molesworth
・ Nigel Mooney
・ Nigel Moore
・ Nigel Moore (basketball)
・ Nigel Moore (cricketer)
・ Nigel Morris
・ Nigel Morritt Wace
・ Nigel Murch
・ Nigel Murray
・ Nigel Napier, 14th Lord Napier
・ Nigel Napier-Andrews
・ Nigel Nestor
・ Nigel Newton
Nigel Nicolson
・ Nigel Noble
・ Nigel Norman
・ Nigel North
・ Nigel Nutt
・ Nigel O'Loughlin
・ Nigel Ogden
・ Nigel Olsson
・ Nigel Osborne
・ Nigel Owens
・ Nigel Palfreyman
・ Nigel Panagopka
・ Nigel Parkinson
・ Nigel Parry
・ Nigel Parsons


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Nigel Nicolson : ウィキペディア英語版
Nigel Nicolson


Nigel Nicolson OBE (19 January 1917 – 23 September 2004) was an English writer, publisher and politician.
==Biography==
Nicolson was the son of writers Sir Harold Nicolson and Vita Sackville-West; he had a brother Ben, 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 to board at Summer Fields, a prep school in Oxford; he then attended Eton College and Balliol College, Oxford. During World War II he served with the Grenadier Guards, 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.〔Laurence W. Martin. ( "The Bournemouth Affair: Britain's First Primary Election" ), ''The Journal of Politics'', Vol. 22, No. 4. (Nov. 1960), pp. 654–81.〕
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 edited his father's diaries and, with Joanne Trautmann, the letters of Virginia Woolf. Later he wrote the "Long Life" column for ''The Spectator'', and a ''Time of My Life'' column for ''The Sunday Telegraph''. His autobiography, ''Long Life'', was published in 1997.

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