Nicholas Mosley
![Nicholas Mosley](/assets/img/authors/unknown.jpg)
Nicholas Mosley
Nicholas Mosley, 3rd Baron Ravensdale, 7th Baronet, MC FRSL, is an English novelist. He is the eldest son of Sir Oswald Mosley, 6th Baronet, an English politician known principally as the founder of the British Union of Fascists, and his first wife, Lady Cynthia Mosley, a daughter of the The 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston...
NationalityBritish
ProfessionNovelist
Date of Birth25 June 1923
apparent becomes blinding british-novelist earth exactly happened happening hundred page till
Not only the style, but the way in which you don't exactly know what on earth has happened or is happening till about page two hundred - then it all becomes apparent in a blinding flash.
book british-novelist months six start
I don't think I've ever read an old book through from start to finish. Not after more than six months after writing it, that is.
british-novelist except form knew less next novel straight
I did not think much what I was writing them for, except that I knew I wanted my next novel to be in some less conventional form than straight narrative.
If they tell the police, the police will find out she was driving, and her career will be put into hell.
art british-novelist concerning curiously perhaps
There is curiously little art concerning the efficacy of reason - perhaps simply because reason is not noticeably efficacious.
bad british-novelist versions
It always strikes me how almost unbelievably bad are the early versions of my novels.
british-novelist gave novels romantic
After these three novels I gave up writing novels for a time; I was dissatisfied with romantic doom, yet didn't see much way around it.
becomes blot british-novelist ink totally
To say a poem is absolute is saying nothing, because an ink blot can be absolute. Yet you put into it what you like. So it becomes totally relative.
british-novelist god
It connects with the theologians' point that you can say what God is not, but not (easily) what He is.
adapting british-novelist cell involved itself mark opposites stay
The mark of a living thing is to be involved in opposites (impossibilities): the living cell that has to be continually adapting itself to stay alive, with its identity.