Five facts about novelist Tom Sharpe, the man behind Wilt

Best-selling satirist, described as 'PG Wodehouse on acid', has died in Spain at the age of 85

Tom Sharpe, the academic turned author at work in his 'Den' on his ninth book.Original Publication: People Disc - HM0173 (Photo by Evening Standard/Getty Images)
(Image credit: Getty Images)

NOVELIST Tom Sharpe has died at the age of 85. The celebrated author of Porterhouse Blue, Blott On The Landscape and creator of the anti-hero Henry Wilt, a hapless college teacher, died at his home in Spain of complications related to diabetes. He had lived there for 20 years. Here are five things you might not know about him.

His father was a Nazi sympathiser: Unitarian minister Reverend George Coverdale Sharpe was a supporter of fascism, Oswald Mosley and Adolf Hitler, and brought up his son with the same beliefs. During World War Two, Sharpe wore a German army belt and, at boarding school in Sussex, fantasised about swimming across the Channel to Occupied France. His father died before the end of the war and Sharpe soon discovered "that Hitler was not the man I was led to believe he was".

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