The son of Sir Oswald Mosley, leader of Britain's Fascists in the 1930s, and himself the inheritor of a noble title, Nicholas Mosley nonetheless fought bravely for Britain during World War II,
and became a tireless anti-Apartheid campaigner thereafter, finding little sense in living the ��ypocritical��life of a British aristocrat . . . and yet, his numerous extramarital affairs came
to shake not only the foundations of his marriage to his first wife, Rosemary, but also his growing sense of himself as a religious man.
The present biography is written in the form of six interviews, each focusing upon one aspect of Mosley's life--from his childhood and experiences as a young man, up to his reflections on
religion, science, philosophy, and their impact on the political and ideological developments of our time.