Michael Nelson (4) (1921–1990)
Author of A Room in Chelsea Square
For other authors named Michael Nelson, see the disambiguation page.
About the Author
Image credit: From Author Page, Valancourt Books
Works by Michael Nelson
When the Bed Broke 1 copy
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Other names
- Mickey
Stratton, Henry - Birthdate
- 1921
- Date of death
- 1990
- Gender
- male
- Short biography
- Michael Nelson (known as ‘Mickey’) was born in 1921. He worked as a journalist before the Second World War, and during the war worked as secretary to John Lehmann, a prominent publisher and man of letters, and served as a captain in the Royal Army Service Corps. After his demobilisation, he lived with his boyfriend in Winchester and owned a bookstore there before meeting Rachel Holland, who knew Nelson was gay but married him anyway; the two remained married the rest of their lives. Nelson and his wife relocated to London, where he was well known in the drinking establishments of Soho. Nelson’s first novel, Knock or Ring (1957), which concerned the illegal practices of the ‘ring’, a group of booksellers who conspired to fix auctions and share profits among themselves, drew on Nelson’s own experiences as a bookseller and received good reviews. His second book, A Room in Chelsea Square (1958), also available from Valancourt Books, was published anonymously, and has gone on to become a gay classic. His other books are Blanket (1959) (published under the pseudonym ‘Henry Stratton’), When the Bed Broke (1961), Captain Blossom (1973), Captain Blossom Soldiers On (1974), Nobs & Snobs (1976), Captain Blossom in Civvy Street (1978), and Fear No More (1989). Michael Nelson died in 1990.
http://www.valancourtbooks.com/author... - Nationality
- UK
- Associated Place (for map)
- UK
Members
Reviews
An amusing and insightful novel about the British antiquarian book and auction trades in the post-WWII period. Highly enjoyable.
Oh my my…. how times have changed! There's absolutely no sex in this story, but unless you have spent the last 25 years of your life in a convent you will surely recognize the “INTENT”. Take lots and lots and lots of fancy presents being bought by two rich old men for the cute young men they think are just waiting for them to “buy”… add the lure of job offers that most people at that time would have killed for…. throw in a fancy suite in the best hotel in the entire show more country…and you can figure out…probably faster than Nicholas did…exactly what these “two old sugar daddies” were after. I really didn’t understand some of it. I think it was the case of “two countries speaking the same language but with different meanings in so many different ways” syndrome. I also didn’t like any of the characters… not even a little bit. The entire story just felt too “dated”...for lack of a better word. show less
Lists
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Statistics
- Works
- 8
- Members
- 120
- Popularity
- #165,355
- Rating
- 3.7
- Reviews
- 3
- ISBNs
- 172
- Languages
- 4
- Favorited
- 1



