Harry Mount

Harry Mount
Born 1971
Residence Kentish Town, London, United Kingdom
Education North Bridge House School
Westminster School
Alma mater Magdalen College, Oxford
Courtauld Institute
Occupation Journalist, author
Parent(s) Sir Ferdinand Mount
Relatives David Cameron (second cousin)

Harry Mount (born 1971) is a British author and journalist, who since 2009 is a frequent contributor to The Daily Mail,[1] as well as The Daily Telegraph.[2]

Early life

Harry Mount was born in 1971. His father Sir Ferdinand Mount, Bt, FRSL, is also a journalist, and was an advisor to Margaret Thatcher. One of his second cousins is the former British Prime Minister, David Cameron.

Mount was educated at the North Bridge House School in London, followed by the Westminster School and then went up to Magdalen College, Oxford, where he read Ancient and Modern History; he graduated with a First (MA (Oxon)).[3] At Oxford he was a member of the Bullingdon Club.[4]

Mount pursued postgraduate studies in Architectural History at the Courtauld Institute receiving an additional MA degree; he then qualified as a barrister, but failed to secure a tenancy in chambers following his pupillage.[5]

Career

Mount worked as a leader writer and a New York correspondent for the Daily Telegraph.

He attracted some mild comment in 2004 for refusing to review David Mitchell's widely acclaimed Cloud Atlas for The Sunday Telegraph because he could not finish it, finding it "unreadable."[6]

Personal life

Mount resides in Kentish Town.

Works

Mount is the author of several books:

In June 2013, Bloomsbury published The Wit and Wisdom of Boris Johnson, edited and introduced by Mount.

Mount also edited a collection of Auberon Waugh's journalism entitled Closing the Circle.

In July 2015, he published his latest book, Harry's Mount's Odyssey: Ancient Greece in the Footsteps of Odysseus (Bloomsbury).

See also

References

  1. Mount, Harry. "Contributions". Daily Mail. London. Retrieved 30 December 2012.
  2. www.telegraph.co.uk
  3. "Drunken hellraising for the super-rich", The Times, 21 October 2008
  4. Lauren Collins, "Young Fogy", The New Yorker, 10 December 2007
  5. The Lawyer
  6. "Literary life". The Daily Telegraph. London. 9 March 2004.

External links

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