Christopher Booker

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Christopher John Penrice Booker (born October 7, 1937) is an English journalist and editor, educated at Shrewsbury School. He was a founding editor of Private Eye at the height of the British Satire Boom, but he was forced out in the magazine's early days by Richard Ingrams. He has, however, remained a regular contributor and joke writer on the magazine since its inception. In the late 1960s he wrote The Neophiliacs, a critical review of the media response to the cultural changes of the period 1954-1964, and one of the first books on the decade to take a 'disabused' line.

He is the co-author, with Richard North, of The Great Deception, a book criticising the European Union. He has pursued a journalistic career, particularly with anti-EU commentary, as a columnist, notably in The Sunday Telegraph.

More recently he published The Seven Basic Plots of Literature: Why We Tell Stories, to mixed reviews.[1]

He was formerly married to the criminal barrister Christine Stone.

A controversy erupted in December 2006 when The Sunday Telegraph heavily censored Booker's column for December 3, removing sections highly critical of Conservative Party leader David Cameron. Booker told his colleague Richard North: "I was told by the SunTel editor today that my item attacking Cameron is to be dropped. This is the first time such a thing has happened since I began writing the column 16 years ago."[2]

  1. ^ Guardian Online, Creative licence, Saturday 27 November 2004. Retrieved 29 October 2006.
  2. ^ EU Referendum Blog, Booker column censored, Sunday, December 03, 2006. Retrieved 31 December 2006..


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