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  1. Impossible Object. Nicholas Mosley. Dalkey Archive Press, 1985 - Fiction - 219 pages. "The object of life is impossible; one cuts out fabrication and creates reality. A mirror is held to the back of the head and one's hand has to move the opposite way from what was intended." In these closing lines from Impossible Object, one has embodied both ...

  2. Nicholas Mosley. "The object of life is impossible; one cuts out fabrication and creates reality. A mirror is held to the back of the head and one's hand has to move the opposite way from what was intended." In these closing lines from Impossible Object, one has embodied both Nicholas Mosley's subject of love and imagination, as well as his ...

  3. Nicholas Mosley is the distinguished author of seventeen novels, including Accident, Impossible Object, The Hesperides Tree and the “Catastrophe Practice” series, Catastrophe Practice, Imago Bird, Serpent, Judith, and Hopeful Monsters. Born in London in 1923, he is regarded as one of the most innovative English novelists to emerge since ...

  4. MOSLEY, Nicholas Nationality: British. Born: Lord Ravensdale in London, 25 June 1923; eldest son of Sir Oswald Mosley; became 3rd Baron Ravensdale, 1966; succeeded to the baronetcy of his father, 1980.

  5. 9 de set. de 2006 · Time at War by Nicholas Mosley 180pp, Orion, £14.99. Nicholas Mosley and I both have fathers who were top fascists in the 1930s. Oswald Mosley was The Leader (it always had upper case initials in ...

  6. Nicholas Mosley presents his father as a "willful dreamer," a man who never saw the potential danger of his pronouncements. Revealed, too, are the elder Mosley's many sexual conquests and his occasional derision of his wife, children, and servants.

  7. 17 de mar. de 2017 · Saturday, 25th May 2024. E-edition Islington Tribune Westminster Extra Classifieds Jobs letters@camdennewjournal.com. Nicholas Mosley was a ‘brave, generous and loving presence’. Tributes to novelist at church close to Holloway Prison, where his fascist leader father was held. Friday, 17th March 2017 — By Gerald Isaaman and Koos Couvée.