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Michael Nicholson OBE
Book Agent: Michael Sissons
Dramatic Rights: Anthony Jones

Michael Nicholson is one of the world's most decorated foreign correspondents. He has been reporting for ITN for over twenty-five years and in that time has covered more wars and conflicts than any other British newsman, from Vietnam to Yugoslavia, fifteen in all. He has won numerous British and International awards, including the British Academy of Film and Television Arts 'Richard Dimbleby' award for his reporting the Falklands War and three times the Royal Television Society's 'Journalist of the Year', the last in 1992 for his reports from Croatia and Bosnia. He holds the Falklands and Gulf Campaign medals and in 1991 was honoured with the OBE.

He lives with his family in Surrey.


NATASHA'S STORY ("WELCOME TO SARAJEVO")

MACMILLAN (Jan 93)

'It begins in Sarajevo, capital of Bosnia, a city held captive by the Serbs, then in its fourth month of siege. Its three hundred thousand inhabitants are being whittled down by lack of food and a relentless bombardment as they witness the systematic destruction of their city and the ethnic cleansing of their country. The world watches too and does nothing.'

It is amidst this violence and destruction that war correspondent Michael Nicholson discovers two hundred children living, unprotected and isolated, in an orphanage on the outskirts of Sarajevo. Among them is Natasha.

A bond rapidly forms between the nine-year-old girl and Nicholson. Following the impulse of his heart and crossing the bounds of journalistic detachment, he makes the courageous decision which will alter Natasha's life and his own; risking arrest and imprisonment, he forges her name into his passport and smuggles her back to England.

There, the little girl, who has only known suffering and deprivation, begins to experience the warmth and comfort of a family environment previously denied to her. Yet her courage will again be put to the test: the prospect of learning a new language and of assimilating an alien culture are doubly daunting for a child whose future remains uncertain.

Both a heartbreaking dispatch from a Balkan tragedy that has left 150,000 dead and the greatest movement of refugees since the Second World War, and an extraordinary human tale, Natasha's Story is an eloquent and fascinating book for our times.


A MEASURE OF DANGER

HARPERCOLLINS (Jan 91)


PILGRIM'S REST

HARPERCOLLINS (Jan 87)


ACROSS THE LIMPOPO

ROBSON (Jan 85)


DECEMBER ULTIMATUM

ROBSON (Jan 83)


RED JOKER

  (Jan 80)


PARTRIDGE KITE

  (Jan 78)