Adam Nicolson
Adam Nicolson, is an English author who has written about history, landscape, great literature and the sea. He is also the 5th Baron Carnock, but does not use the title.
Biography
Adam Nicolson is the son of writer Nigel Nicolson and his wife Philippa Tennyson-d'Eyncourt. He is the grandson of the writers Vita Sackville-West and Sir Harold Nicolson, and great-grandson of Sir Eustace Tennyson d'Eyncourt and Arthur Nicolson, 1st Baron Carnock. He was educated at Eaton House, Summer Fields School, Eton College where he was a King's Scholar, and Magdalene College, Cambridge. He has worked as a journalist and columnist on the Sunday Times, the Sunday Telegraph, the Daily Telegraph, National Geographic Magazine and Granta, where he is a contributing editor. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature, the Society of Antiquaries and the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.He is noted for his books Sea Room ; God's Secretaries: The Making of the King James Bible; The Mighty Dead exploring the epic Greek poems; The Seabird's Cry about the disaster afflicting the world's seabirds; The Making of Poetry on the Romantic Revolution in England in the 1790s; and Life Between the Tides, a boundary-crossing account of the tides in human and animal life.
He has made several television series and radio series on a variety of subjects including the King James Bible, 17th-century literacy, Crete, Homer, the idea of Arcadia, the untold story of Britain's 20th-century whalers and the future of Atlantic seabirds.
Between 2005 and 2009, in partnership with the National Trust, Nicolson led a project which transformed the surrounding the house and garden at Sissinghurst into a productive mixed farm, growing meat, fruit, cereals and vegetables for the National Trust restaurant. And between 2012 and 2017, together with the RSPB, the EU and SNH, Nicolson and his son Tom were partners in a project to eradicate invasive predators from the Shiant Isles, Outer Hebrides, Scotland. In March 2018, the islands were declared rat-free.
In December 2008 he succeeded his cousin David Nicolson, 4th Baron Carnock, as 5th Baron Carnock.
Personal life
Nicolson met his first wife, the writer Olivia Fane, when he was a student at Cambridge University. They married in 1982, had three sons, and later divorced.He is married to the writer and gardener Sarah Raven, with whom he has two daughters: Rosie and Molly. The family lives at Perch Hill Farm in Sussex.
Awards and recognition
- 1986 Somerset Maugham Award Frontiers
- 1987 PBFA Topography Prize Wetland
- 1997 British Press Awards Feature Writer of the Year
- 1998 British Book Awards Illustrated Book of the Year Restoration
- 2002 Duff Cooper Prize Sea Room
- 2004 Royal Society of Literature Heinemann Award Power and Glory
- 2005 Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
- 2006 Royal United Services Institute Duke of Westminster's Medal for Military Literature Men of Honour
- 2009 Royal Society of Literature Ondaatje Prize Sissinghurst: An Unfinished History
- 2009 Samuel Johnson Prize Sissinghurst: an Unfinished History
- 2010 Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries
- 2014 Samuel Johnson Prize The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters
- 2014 Scottish BAFTA Britain's Whale Hunters
- 2015 London Hellenic Prize The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters
- 2017 Richard Jefferies Society Award for Nature Writing The Seabird's Cry
- 2018 Gomes Lecturer, Emmanuel College, Cambridge
- 2018 Wainwright Prize The Seabird's Cry
- 2019 Costa Biography Award The Making of Poetry
- 2021 Sunday Times Audible Short Story Award The Fearful Summer
- 2022 Richard Jefferies Society Award for Nature Writing the sea is not made of water: Life between the Tides
- 2022 Wainwright Prize the sea is not made of water: Life between the Tides
- 2024 Runciman Award How to Be: Life Lessons from the Early Greeks
- 2024 Pleasure of Reading Prize
Books
- The National Trust Book of Long Walks
- Long Walks in France
- Frontiers
- Wetland
- Two Roads to Dodge City with Nigel Nicolson
- Prospects of England: Two Thousand Years Seen Through Twelve English Towns with Peter Morter
- On Foot: Guided Walks in England, France, and the United States
- Restoration: Rebuilding of Windsor Castle
- Regeneration: The Story of the Dome
- Perch Hill: A New Life
- Mrs Kipling: The Hated Wife
- Sea Room
- Power and Glory: The Making of the King James Bible
- Seamanship
- Men of Honour: Trafalgar and the Making of the English Hero ''
- Earls of Paradise
- Sissinghurst: An Unfinished History
- Arcadia: The Dream of Perfection in Renaissance England
- The Smell of Summer Grass
- The Gentry: Stories of the English
- The Mighty Dead: Why Homer Matters
- The Seabird's Cry: The Life and Loves of Puffins, Gannets and Other Ocean Voyagers
- The Making of Poetry: Coleridge, the Wordsworths and their Year of Marvels
- The Sea is Not Made of Water: Life Between the Tides
- How to Be: Life Lessons From the Early Greeks
- ''Bird School: a Beginner in the Wood''
Television
- Atlantic Britain Channel 4, 2004
- Sissinghurst BBC 4, 2009
- When God Spoke English: The Making of the King James Bible BBC 4, 2011
- The Century That Wrote Itself BBC 4, 2013
- Britain's Whale Hunters BBC 4, 2014
- The Last Seabird Summer? BBC 4, 2016
Radio
- Homer's Landscapes 3 x 45 mins, BBC Radio 3, 2008
- A Cretan Spring 5 x 15 mins, with Sarah Raven, BBC Radio 3, 2009
- Dark Arcadias 2 x 45 mins, BBC Radio 3, 2011