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Norman Shrapnel

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Name
  
Norman Shrapnel

Role
  
Journalist

Children
  
John Shrapnel


Died
  
February 1, 2004, Oakridge, Gloucestershire, Bisley-with-Lypiatt, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Mary Lillian Myfanwy Shrapnel (m. 1940–2004)

Books
  
The Performers, The seventies

Grandchildren
  
Lex Shrapnel, Joe Shrapnel, Tom Shrapnel

Similar People
  
John Shrapnel, Tom Shrapnel, Lex Shrapnel, Anthony Bartley, Deborah Kerr

Norman Shrapnel (5 October 1912 – 1 February 2004) was an English journalist, author, and parliamentary correspondent.

Shrapnel was born in Grimsby, Lincolnshire, and was educated at The King's School, Grantham. In 1947, after war service in the RAF, he joined the Manchester Guardian as reporter, book reviewer, and theatre critic. He became the paper’s (and the later Guardian’s) parliamentary correspondent in 1958, succeeding Harry Boardman, a post he held until 1975. In 1969 he won the first Political Writer of the Year award.

He wrote books on history and politics (The Performers: Politics as Theatre 1978, and The Seventies), and on topography (A View of the Thames 1977, and his Shrapnel's British Isles series, documenting places such as the Isle of Ely and the Isle of Axholme). For The Bluffer’s Guides, he wrote Bluff Your Way in Politics. Shrapnel broadcast on the BBC World Service, presenting British social and political life.

He married Mary Lillian Myfanwy Edwards in 1940, and had two sons, one of whom is the stage actor John Shrapnel. He died at Far Oakridge, Gloucestershire, in 2004.

References

Norman Shrapnel Wikipedia