A. N. Wilson

@Columnist, Facts and Childhood

A

Oct 27, 1950

BritishMedia PersonalitiesJournalistsNovelistsNon-Fiction WritersBiographersScorpio Celebrities
Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: October 27, 1950
  • Nationality: British
  • Famous: Columnist, Writers, Media Personalities, Journalists, Novelists, Non-Fiction Writers, Biographers
  • Spouses: Katherine Duncan-Jones
  • Known as: Andrew Norman Wilson
  • Childrens: Beatrice Wilson, Emily Wilson
  • Universities:
    • New College
    • Oxford
    • Rugby School
    • St Stephen's House
    • Oxford

In 1971, A. N. Wilson married the Shakespeare scholar Katherine Duncan-Jones. The couple had two daughters—Emily and Beatrice. Their marriage ended in divorce in 1990.

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Personal Life

Andrew Norman Wilson was born in Stone, Staffordshire, on October 27, 1950 to Norman Wilson and his wife. He has one brother and one sister. His father had been a colonel in the Royal Artillery and was the managing director of the Wedgwood factory, a pottery company.

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Childhood & Early Life

His parents sent young Andrew to Hillstone School, Great Malvern in Worcestershire. Unknown to his parents, the school’s headmaster and his wife were a pedophile and a sadist respectively who sexually abused and tortured the boys. After having tolerated the torture for a while Andrew mustered courage and threw a bowl of porridge at the headmaster’s wife. Eventually he was removed from the school.

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Childhood & Early Life

He then went to the Rugby School and joined the New College, Oxford, after completing his schooling. He completed his B.A. in 1972 and M.A. in 1976.

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Childhood & Early Life

Raised as a Christian, he entered St Stephen's House, the High Church theological hall at Oxford with plans to get ordained in the Church of England. But, he renounced religion by the end of his first year and left.

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Childhood & Early Life

A. N. Wilson embarked on a writing career and brought out his first novel, ‘The Sweets of Pimlico’ in 1977. The plot revolves around an introverted woman who gets attracted to an elderly aristocratic man. He released two more novels within the next couple of years: ‘Hours’ (1978) and ‘Kindly Light’ (1979).

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Career

In the 1980s he forayed into writing biographies and gained a reputation as a frank and entertaining biographer. Some of the books he wrote during this time are: ‘The Laird of Abbotsford: A view of Sir Walter Scott’ (1980), ‘Hilaire Belloc: A Biography’ (1985), and ‘Tolstoy: A Biography’ (1988).

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Career

During the 1980s, he openly declared that he was an atheist and penned several works on the themes of religion, spirituality and atheism, the major ones of which are ‘Against Religion: Why we should live without it’ (1991), ‘Jesus: A Life’ (1992), ‘Paul: The mind of the Apostle’ (1997), and ‘God's Funeral: The Decline of Faith in Western Civilization’ (1999).

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Career

He also wrote several novels during the 1990s including ‘The Vicar of Sorrows ‘(1993), ‘The Tabitha Stories’ (1997) and ‘Dream Children’ (1998). A highly poignant novel, ‘Dream Children’ deals with the concept of pedophilia and draws heavily upon the author’s own horrific experiences as a child.

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Career

A. N. Wilson penned a novel sequence referred to as ‘The Lampitt Chronicles’ which consists ‘Incline Our Hearts’ (1988), ‘A Bottle in the Smoke’ (1990), ‘Daughters of Albion’ (1991), ‘Hearing Voices’ (1995), and ‘A Watch in the Night’ (1996).

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Career

His novel ‘My Name Is Legion’ is considered to be one of his most popular works. The book tells the story of a mentally disturbed teenager and revolves around the topics of yellow journalism and Christian religion, and their impact on the society and culture.

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Major Works