Born in Vienna in 1936, David Pryce-Jones grew up in France, Morocco & Britain. Studied History at Magdalen College, Oxford, served with the Coldstream Guards in postwar Germany, multilingual, taught at Berkeley & Iowa, has written and continues to write articles, reviews & analyses in various capacities for the Times, TLS, Observer, Daily Telegraph, Spectator, National Review, Commentary, New Criterion, & others. Author of over 40 titles of fiction and non-fiction published in 3 languages. Appeared at conferences throughout the world, translator, co-author & biographer. Has travelled to & reported from Asia, Africa, America, Australasia, in particular France, USSR and the Middle-East. Tireless critic of fascism in its various guises, he triggered the ire of both Britain's left and right by outing the British upper class' pre-war nazi sympathies, while calling out various useful idiots and apologists of communist mass-murder. Continues to write, read and think from his home in London.