Quentin Letts Popular Books

Quentin Letts Biography & Facts

Quentin Richard Stephen Letts (born 6 February 1963) is an English journalist and theatre critic. He has written for The Daily Telegraph, Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday, and The Oldie. On 26 February 2019, it was announced that Letts would return to The Times. On 1 September 2023, Letts returned to the Daily Mail. Early life The son of Richard Francis Bonner Letts and Jocelyn Elizabeth (née Adami), he was born and raised in Cirencester and for a while attended Oakley Hall Preparatory School, which was run by his father. He boarded at The Elms School in Colwall on the Herefordshire side of the Malvern Hills. His education continued at Haileybury College, before he won a scholarship to Bellarmine College, Kentucky (now Bellarmine University), which he left after a year. He returned to England and worked as a barman and part-time local journalist in Oxford, before going to Trinity College, Dublin (TCD), where he edited a number of publications including Piranha!, Trinity's satirical newspaper. He graduated with an MA degree in Medieval and Renaissance Literature. At Jesus College, Cambridge, he gained a Diploma in Classical Archaeology. Career Since 1987, Letts has written for several British newspapers. His first post was with the Peterborough diary column for The Daily Telegraph. For two years (1995–97), he was New York correspondent for The Times. He wrote a parliamentary sketch for The Daily Telegraph for four years until 2001. Letts then joined the Daily Mail appointed by the newspaper's editor, Paul Dacre, to resuscitate the paper's own parliamentary sketches, a feature which Letts has said had remained dormant at the title since 1990. He was the first person to write the Mail's pseudonymous Clement Crabbe column, launched in 2006, and has also been the publication's theatre critic since 2004, again at Dacre's suggestion. A freelance since 1997, by mid-2006, he was contributing regularly to The News of the World and Horse & Hound magazine. According to Stephen Glover, he has supplied gossip to numerous diary columns. "Look, diaries are very much part of my output as a journalist" he told James Silver writing for The Guardian in 2006. "To me it's like a plumber mending taps. It's what I do. I send out two or three stories a day. They don't all get published, of course. It's like sending out carrier pigeons, some of them don't make it back". In the Daily Mail in 2016, Letts described the BBC journalist Andrew Marr as "Captain-Hop-Along, growling away on BBC One, throwing his arm about like a tipsy conductor". Marr was recovering from a stroke he suffered in 2013, and Letts later apologised for the remarks. Letts was invited to present an edition of the BBC current affairs programme Panorama broadcast on 20 April 2009, which dealt with the growing criticism of the influence of health and safety on various aspects of British life. He has also been a regular guest on BBC programmes, such as Have I Got News For You and This Week (with Andrew Neil). He presents a programme on BBC Radio Four called What's the Point Of …?, in which he questions the purpose of various British institutions. A 2015 programme in the series, which mocked the science behind climate change, was not repeated after its first broadcast and withdrawn from the BBC iPlayer after the BBC Trust found it to be in "serious breach" of BBC rules on impartiality and accuracy. Letts told The Times: "It’s a bit Orwellian. There’s an amateurishness to their sinister attempts to control thought". Letts has published several books including 50 People Who Buggered Up Britain and Bog-Standard Britain, all with his UK publisher Constable & Robinson. Brandon Robshaw in The Independent described the latter as being "a bog-standard rant about exactly those subjects one would expect a Daily Mail columnist to rant about" and "a waste of everyone's time". 50 People Who Buggered Up Britain has sold around 45,000 copies and was reviewed in The Spectator (a publication Letts writes for) as "an angry book, beautifully written". His 2015 novel The Speaker's Wife, about Parliament and the Church of England, was described as 'rollicking' by Labour politician Chris Bryant in The Guardian. Kate Saunders in The Times commented: "Frankly, I adored reading this, but for all the wrong reasons. It is absolutely dreadful from start to finish. And there is nothing funnier than a bad novel by a good writer". His non-fiction book, Patronising Bastards: How The Elites Betrayed Britain, was published in October 2017 and is an attack on the British ruling elite. Interviewed on the Today programme on BBC Radio 4, he was asked why Paul Dacre, the long-serving editor of one of the best-selling newspapers in Britain (and one of Letts' employers), was absent from the book. Letts said: "He’s escaped somehow, I don’t know how...", adding: "I’m not a suicide bomber, for God’s sake". "Lett's put-downs", wrote Roger Lewis in The Times "are hysterical and take the libel laws to the brink". Allegations of racism and discrimination In April 2018, as part of a review of the play The Fantastic Follies of Mrs Rich, an adaptation by the Royal Shakespeare Company of the 18th-century comedy The Beau Deceived by Mary Pix, Letts suggested that actor Leo Wringer was miscast as the nobleman Clerimont. Letts wrote that Wringer was "too cool, too mature, not chinless or daft or funny enough" to play the character, whom Letts saw as "a honking Hooray of the sort that has infested the muddier reaches of England’s shires for centuries." Letts continued: Was Mr Wringer cast because he is black? If so, the RSC’s clunking approach to politically correct casting has again weakened its stage product. I suppose its managers are under pressure from the Arts Council to tick inclusiveness boxes, but at some point they are going to have to decide if their core business is drama or social engineering. In response, in a joint statement, the RSC's artistic director Gregory Doran and its executive director, Catherine Mallyon, accused Letts of holding a "blatantly racist attitude" and criticised his "ugly and prejudiced commentary". Letts' comments were also widely criticised on Twitter, including by actors Samuel West and Robert Lindsay; the latter said that "Quentin Letts is not a reviewer offering any sensible critique so unlike a critic of stature should be ignored". Letts responded with a further article in the Daily Mail in which he argued that his critique was not racist, as he did not claim that it was Wringer's race which made him unsuitable for the role, but rather criticised what he saw as a culture in British theatre of casting actors based on their race rather than their talent or suitability for a role. In July 2019, in a review of David Hare's production of Peer Gynt at the National Theatre, London, Letts made an unfavourable comparison between English actor Oliver Ford Davies' "fruity purr" to "the whining Scottish accents". Scottish actor James McArdle, wh.... Discover the Quentin Letts popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Quentin Letts books.

Best Seller Quentin Letts Books of 2024

  • Orderly Britain synopsis, comments

    Orderly Britain

    Tim Newburn & Andrew Ward

    How do British pavements remain free of dog mess? Why are paths not littered with cigarette butts or roads not lined with abandoned cars? What does the decline of the public lavato...

  • How Ireland Really Went Bust synopsis, comments

    How Ireland Really Went Bust

    Matt Cooper

    The definitive account of the tumultuous events that led to Ireland going broke in 2010From the night the Irish government guaranteed the debts of Irish banks in September 2008 Ire...

  • The Great European Rip-off synopsis, comments

    The Great European Rip-off

    Dr. David Craig & Matthew Elliott

    In this EU referendum year, it's time for people across Europe to look at what really goes on in Brussels in our name. It has been estimated that the EU costs us around £1,000 bill...

  • The Secret Diary of Jeremy Corbyn synopsis, comments

    The Secret Diary of Jeremy Corbyn

    Lucien Young

    In the grand tradition of The Diary of a Nobody comes the secret diary of the twentyfirst century’s most unlikely leader: Jeremy Corbyn.Jeremy Corbyn is a committed allotment holde...

  • British Society Since 1945 synopsis, comments

    British Society Since 1945

    Arthur Marwick

    High and popular culture; family, race, gender and class relations; sexual attitudes and material conditions; science and technology the diversity of social developments in Britai...

  • Season of Blood synopsis, comments

    Season of Blood

    Fergal Keane

    When President Habyarimana’s jet was shot down in April 1994, Rwanda erupted into a hundredday orgy of killing – which left up to a million dead. Fergal Keane travelled through the...

  • 50 People Who Buggered Up Britain synopsis, comments

    50 People Who Buggered Up Britain

    Quentin Letts

    From the Sunday Times bestselling authorWhich fifty people made Britain the wreck she is? From ludicrous propagandist Alastair Campbell to the Luftwaffe's allies, the modernist arc...

  • How to be British synopsis, comments

    How to be British

    Tim Benson

    Not sure why everyone keeps talking about the weather?Can’t tell your Earl Grey from your English breakfast?Feeling a wobble in your stiff upper lip?It sounds like you need a crash...

  • Alfred the Great synopsis, comments

    Alfred the Great

    Asser, Simon Keynes & Michael Lapidge

    Asser's Life of King Alfred, written in 893, is a revealing account of one of the greatest of medieval kings. Composed by a monk of St David's in Wales who became Bishop of Sherbor...

  • Enemies of the People synopsis, comments

    Enemies of the People

    Sam Jordison

    Something has gone wrong. We're living in an age of celebratory racism, extreme inequality, uncertainty and fear. We're governed by people who claim to be populist but who seem to ...

  • I, Maybot synopsis, comments

    I, Maybot

    John Crace

    'The Maybot is rebooted as strong and humble. Stumble for short.' 'Kim JongMay awkward and incredulous as journalist asks question.' 'Supreme leader produces pure TV Valium on The ...

  • 50 People Who Messed up the World synopsis, comments

    50 People Who Messed up the World

    Alexander Parker & Tim Richman

    Who would top your list of the fifty people who have done the most to make the modern world a worse place?'I can't imagine how they whittled it down to just 50 people' comedianNi...

  • The Country House Revealed synopsis, comments

    The Country House Revealed

    Dan Cruickshank

    Spanning the architectural history of the country house from the disarming Elizabethan charm of South Wraxall, the classical rigour of Kinross in Scotland, the majesty and ingenuit...

  • The Seven Ages of Man synopsis, comments

    The Seven Ages of Man

    James Innes-Smith

    What does it mean to be a man in the twentyfirst century? How can today's men lead a more fulfilling existence? Masculinity has reached a moment of crisis. From the erosion of unif...

  • Your Call synopsis, comments

    Your Call

    Jeremy Vine

    'Full of glorious examples of caller wisdom [with] laughoutloud anecdotes' Allison PearsonHaving taken over 25,000 listener calls on his BBC Radio 2 lunchtime show, Jeremy Vine dec...