Nigel Dempster and the Death of Discretion
On sale
7th October 2010
Price: £16.99
No one is more responsible for Britain’s current obsession with celebrity culture than the late, great gossip columnist Nigel Dempster (1941-2007). For a quarter of a century, as the editor of the Daily Mail’s diary, he was the man perfectly placed and qualified to record – and accelerate – the end of the age of deference…
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Reviews
I'm really jealous of this; Dempsters world is such a juicy subject and Tim Willis has caught it completely.'
A gorgeous account of the sentimental sadist, seasoned with scandal and nostalgia'
Witty, scandalous and horribly riveting'.
This lively, well-written biography is studded with the sort of anecdotes Dempster would have relished... (But) is is more than a portrait of a man; it is a portrait of a pre-Twitter age. Dempster prefigured our celebrity culture and in the end was submerged by it...'
This alluring biography chronicles the extraordinary changes British society has undergone in the past few decades and accurately defines the columnist s own part in that seismic shift. It s a dazzling read, a helter-skelter ride through High Society and Fleet Street...'
Not just a fine portrait of a diarist, Tim Willis has anatomised a society in flux'
A must for anyone interested in showbusiness and how it is reported
Effervescent, elegantly written and faultlessly researched... Tim Willis has caught the atmosphere of the Dempster decades with uncanny precision. Willis's book treats the many facets of Dempster, his braggadocio and his bonking, his swagger, his guile and his generosity with frankness and in fascinating detail.'