Honorific Prefix: | Sir |
Ferdinand Mount | |
Honorific Suffix: | Bt |
Office: | Director of Number 10 Policy Unit |
Primeminister: | Margaret Thatcher |
Predecessor: | John Hoskyns |
Successor: | John Redwood |
Term Start: | 1982 |
Term End: | 1983 |
Birth Name: | William Robert Ferdinand Mount |
Birth Date: | 2 July 1939 |
Education: | Greenways School Sunningdale School Eton College |
Spouse: | Julia (née Lucas) |
Children: | 4 |
Relatives: | Sir William Mount |
Alma Mater: | Christ Church, Oxford |
Occupation: | Writer, novelist |
Sir William Robert Ferdinand Mount, 3rd Baronet, FRSL (born 2 July 1939), is a British writer, novelist, and columnist for The Sunday Times, as well as a political commentator.
Ferdinand Mount, brought up by his parents in the isolated village of Chitterne, Wiltshire, began school at the age of eight.[1] He then attended Greenways and Sunningdale School before Eton College, after which he went to Christ Church, Oxford.
Mount worked at Conservative Party HQ as head of the Number 10 Policy Unit during 1982–83, when Margaret Thatcher was Prime Minister[2] [3] and played a significant part in devising the 1983 general election manifesto.
Mount is regarded as being on the one-nation or "wet" side of the Conservative Party. He succeeded his uncle, Sir William Mount, in the family title as 3rd baronet in 1993, but prefers to remain known as Ferdinand Mount.[4]
For eleven years (1991–2002), he was editor of The Times Literary Supplement, and then became a regular contributor to Standpoint magazine. He wrote for The Sunday Times, and in 2005 joined The Daily Telegraph as a commentator.[5] He writes for the London Review of Books.[6]
Mount has written novels, including a six-volume novel sequence called Chronicle of Modern Twilight, centring on a low-key character, Gus Cotton; the title alludes to the sequence A Chronicle of Ancient Sunlight by Henry Williamson, and another sequence entitled Tales of History and Imagination. Volume 5, entitled Fairness, was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize in 2001.[7]
Mount serves as chairman of the Friends of the British Library[8] and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of Literature (FRSL) in 1991.[9]
The only son of Robert (Robin) Mount, an army officer and amateur steeplechase jockey,[10] and Lady Julia Pakenham, youngest daughter of the 5th Earl of Longford, KP, Ferdinand inherited the baronetcy from his uncle Lt-Col. Sir William Mount, Bt, TD, DL, who died in 1993, having had three daughters, including Mary Cameron, JP (b. 1934), mother of David Cameron, former Prime Minister (and Conservative Party leader).[2] [11]
The Labour politician Frank Pakenham, 7th Earl of Longford, and his brother, Edward Pakenham, 6th Earl of Longford, were Mount's maternal uncles. His maternal aunts were the writers Lady Mary Clive, Lady Pansy Lamb and Lady Violet Powell, the wife of author Anthony Powell.
Sir Ferdinand and his wife, Julia née Lucas, live in Islington, London; he and Lady Mount have three surviving children, William (b. 1969 and heir apparent to the title), Harry (b. 1971, a journalist) and Mary (b. 1972, an editor who is married to Indian writer Pankaj Mishra).[12]