Nicholas Whittaker
{{Short description|British writer}}
{{Infobox person
|name = Nicholas Whittaker
|image = Nicholas Whittaker.jpg
|caption = Whittaker in the 1980s
|birth_place = Shrewsbury, England
|birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1953}}
|occupation = Journalist/Writer
|yearsactive = 1980–present}}
Nicholas Whittaker (born 1953) is a British writer of non-fiction books on popular culture, often incorporating autobiographical extracts from his own life. He was born in Shrewsbury and lived in Burton upon Trent until 1975. Whittaker has worked as a freelance journalist for pornographic magazines, interviewing figures such as Ray Cooney, Divine, Donald Sinden, Steve Harley, Justin de Villeneuve, Uri Geller and Kingsley Amis for Club International.{{citation needed|date=June 2014}}
Books
Whittaker’s first book was Platform Souls, published in 1995Burton Mail, 10 November 1995 on the subject of the British hobby of trainspotting.The Sunday Times (Culture), 16 May 1993 It follows his progress from the dying days of the steam locomotive in Britain (1964-1968), through the so-called Rail Blue diesel era of the 1970s, and his travels around BritainThe Observer 22 April 1979The Sunday Telegraph (Review), 12 May 1991 and Europe,The Observer 17 February 1980 by rail. The book ends with his failed attempts to interest his young sons in what was once a common hobby for a majority of British boys.
Blue Period (1997) was an autobiographical piece about Whittaker’s years working for pornographic magazines, notably Fiesta and then the Paul Raymond publications Razzle, Men Only and Club International. The book contrasts the popular and accepted mythologies of sexual liaisons in the magazines with the more mundane reality of Whittaker's own romantic experiences.Midweek, 7 April 1997, My Time in the Titillation Trade
Sweet Talk (1998), subtitled "The Secret History of Confectionery", was a popular history of British confectionery.Burton Mail (Weekender), 5 December 1998 It told the story of sweets, chocolate, liquorice, chewing gum and ice cream from the late 19th century up until the end of the 20th, much of it seen through the perspective of sweet shops, school children and stories in the popular press.The Daily Telegraph (Night & Day), 23 July 2000 The book draws from a century’s worth of trade magazines such as Sweet Shop Owner and Confectionery News.Sweet Talk (preface). Nicholas Whittaker, Gollancz 1998
Published in 2001, Whittaker's Toys Were Us takes a look at toys and games from the mid 19th century to the final years of the 20th.The Times (Weekend), 1 December 2001.The Independent (Wednesday Review), 12 December 2001. The book was based on research in toy trade journals and is an overview of childhood favourites such as Hornby Dublo, Monopoly and Spirograph.
In August 2015 Icon Books published a revised and updated 20th anniversary edition of Platform Souls.
References
{{reflist}}
=Sources=
- The Express on Sunday, 21 September 1997, “Why This Man Deserves Respect”, London
- Railway Magazine, June 2006, “Ale By Rail: the Burton Brewery Lines", London
- The Guardian (Finance), April 19, 1997, “Blue Money Rises to the Top”, London
- Landmark Intermediate English (Unit 5), OUP, 2002
External links
- {{official website|http://www.nicholas-whittaker.net}}
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Category:People from Burton upon Trent