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Thomas Hinde (1926–2014)

Author of The Domesday Book: England's Heritage, Then and Now

33+ Works 556 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Works by Thomas Hinde

Mr. Nicholas (1952) 26 copies, 1 review
The Day the Call Came (1964) — Author — 20 copies
Stately Gardens of Britain (1983) 14 copies
Just chicken (1985) 7 copies
Forests of Britain (1985) 7 copies
Ninety double martinis (1963) 4 copies
High (1970) 4 copies
The village (1969) 4 copies

Associated Works

Lewis Carroll : Looking-glass letters (1991) — Editor — 72 copies, 1 review

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Common Knowledge

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6 reviews
A curious and rather uncomfortable book about a dysfunctional upper-middle class English family whose head descends into psychotic depression. The story is told from the point of view of Peter, a somewhat ineffectual undergraduate son. The Mr. Nicholas of the title is a martinet and a philanderer who believes that a wife's place is to look after the home and that his sons should bow to his experience and presumed wisdom and do as they are told. Clearly affluent, Mr Nicholas seems to have no show more gainful employment.

His wife is well-meaning and compliant, seeing her duty to be to love and care for her husband, despite his unconcealed affair with a neighbour. She is a door-mat! The other family members are Owen, an erratic and obsessional 17 year old with more than a hint of autistic spectrum disorder, and David, the youngest son, who becomes involved in a barely explained, but profound, way with a mature ex-Army officer - religion is declared, sex implied.

The action takes place in the family home, a large house with woodland and a tennis court near military ranges on the Surrey / Hampshire borders. Initially the reader is given the view of young men who are, for various reasons, at odds with their domineering and insensitive father. It gradually becomes clear that Mr Nicholas is not simply pompous, opinionated and prejudiced but has within him the seeds of madness. In the late forties pharmacological treatment of mental illnes was largely confined to sedation with the alternative of psychotherapy using analytic-based methods. Mr. Nicholas is ineffectively treated by his GP and the book ends with his attempted suicide. The ending is inconclusive as, apparently, was typical of Hinde's fiction.

Thomas Hinde, whose first novel this is, was grouped with his contemporaries, John Braine, Kingsley Amis and John Wain as an Angry Young Man.
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England's heritage then and now.
A fundamental part of English heritage, the Domesday Book is unique in medieval history, recording an entire country and its inhabitants town by town, with over 12,500 entries. In this lavishly illustrated book, Elizabeth Hallam and Thomas Hinde examine the background to the nine-hundred-year-old document, setting the events of 1086 into the context of the medieval world. It is a remarkable tribute to English continuity

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Works
33
Also by
1
Members
556
Popularity
#44,899
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
2
ISBNs
52

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