C. Northcote Parkinson

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Cyril Northcote Parkinson (July 30, 1909 - March 9, 1993), born in Durham, England was a historian and author of some sixty books. He was educated at Cambridge, and went on to teach in Malaya and at Harvard and Illinois in the United States. His writings included historical fiction, often based on the Napoleonic period, and sea stories. He is even more famous for his satire of bureaucratic institutions, notably his Parkinson's law and other studies. This is a collection of short studies explaining the inevitability of bureaucratic expansion, and includes a note on why driving on the left side of the road (see road transport) is natural.

As early as the 1930s Parkinson had successfully predicted that the Royal Navy would eventually have more admirals than ships.

Bibliography

Richard Delancey series

Other Nautical Fiction

History

  • Edward Pellew, Viscount Exmouth (1934)
  • The Trade Winds, Trade in the French Wars 1793-1815 (1948)
  • Samuel Waters, Lieut. RN (1949)
  • Trade in the Eastern Seas (1955)
  • East and West (1963)
  • Britannia Rules (1977)
  • Gunpowder, Treason and Plot (1978)
  • A Short History of the British Navy, 1776-1816
  • Portsmouth Point, The Navy in Fiction, 1793-1815 (1948)

Other Non-Fiction

Audio Recordings

  • Discusses Political Science with Julian H. Franklin (10 LPs) (1959)

See also

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