Thomas Hinde (novelist)

For other people named Thomas Hinde, see Thomas Hinde (disambiguation).
Thomas Hinde
Born Thomas Willes Chitty
2 March 1926
Felixstowe, Suffolk, England, UK
Died 7 March 2014(2014-03-07) (aged 88)
West Hoathly, West Sussex, England, UK
Occupation Novelist and nonfiction author
Citizenship British
Spouse Susan Hopkinson (m. 1964–2014)
Children Four

Sir Thomas Willes Chitty, 3rd Baronet (2 March 1926 – 7 March 2014), better known by his pen name Thomas Hinde, was a British novelist.

Life

Thomas Hinde was born in Felixstowe, Suffolk, England, and educated at Winchester College and University College, Oxford. After service in the Royal Navy, he worked briefly for the Inland Revenue and then for the Shell Petroleum Company, before becoming a full-time writer. He became a baronet on the death of his father in 1955.

Hinde married Susan Hopkinson, daughter of the novelist Antonia White, in 1951; the couple remained wed until his death in 2014; they had four children. Hinde and his wife, also an author writing under the name Susan Chitty, lived at Bow Cottage, West Hoathly, West Sussex, a village on the edge of Ashdown Forest in the High Weald.[1][2]

Works

His first novel, Mr Nicholas, was published in 1953.[3] His second, Happy As Larry, the story of a disaffected, unemployable, aspiring writer with a failed marriage, led critics to associate him with the Angry Young Men movement.[4] An excerpt from Happy As Larry appeared in the popular paperback anthology, Protest: The Beat Generation and the Angry Young Men.[5]

Hinde published thirteen further novels before turning to non-fiction. After 1980, he also published books on English stately homes and gardens, English court life, and the forests of Britain, as well as histories of English schools.

Bibliography

Novels

Nonfiction

References

  1. "Thomas Hinde Biography". Retrieved 29 July 2016.
  2. "Obituary: Sir Thomas Chitty". Daily Telegraph. 11 March 2014.
  3. Ricks, Christopher (2 October 1980). "Review of reissue of Mr Nicholas".
  4. Allsop, Kenneth (1958). The Angry Decade; A Survey of the Cultural Revolt of the Nineteen Fifties. London: Peter Owen Ltd.
  5. Feldman, Gene; Gartneberg, Max, eds. (1958). Protest: The Beat Generation and the Angry Young Men. New York: Citadel Press.
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