Why British author Simon Winchester would sleep with one of his critics’ wives, his love of Hong Kong, and why he got prison time during the Falklands war
- Author and journalist Simon Winchester has worked all over the world, covered Watergate, and spent many happy years exploring China from his Hong Kong base
![British author and journalist Simon Winchester in Milan, Italy, in September 2018. Photo: Getty Images](https://cdn.i-scmp.com/sites/default/files/styles/1020x680/public/d8/images/canvas/2023/07/03/4292519c-3f66-48ed-9913-0561feacfe2d_104a4ed0.jpg?itok=t4-WWWmP&v=1688330849)
I was born in London in 1944 and sent to boarding school at the age of four-and-a-half, which was young even by the exacting standards of the English middle classes in those days.
It was a tough regime – there were a lot of beatings and we weren’t addressed by name but by number. I was Number 46.
My father had had a tough time of it in the war, and I think he found my presence disruptive when he came home having been interred in a prisoner-of-war camp. They never had any other children.
I don’t think being sent away to school had any great lasting effect on me, although I did suffer some mental problems at university.
![Winchester aged five, circa 1949. Photo: Simon Winchester Winchester aged five, circa 1949. Photo: Simon Winchester](https://img.i-scmp.com/cdn-cgi/image/fit=contain,width=1024,format=auto/sites/default/files/d8/images/canvas/2023/06/30/6696d0ce-1eef-416b-b5f6-29c4ba847959_87956c93.jpg)
Electric shocks
It started when I was working – overworking, rather – at Oxford. I woke up one morning and found I could not understand what people were saying or do something as simple as buy a newspaper. I thought I was going mad.
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