J. Clive Matthews

J Clive Matthews (also known as James Clive-Matthews) is a British writer, editor, blogger and online content consultant. In 2008 he was shortlisted for the inaugural UACES-Reuters Reporting Europe Award, the only independent journalist on a five-person list that included the BBC's Europe Editor Mark Mardell and the Europe Editor of The Economist. In 2010 he was named winner of the Internet category in the UK heat of the European Parliament Prize for Journalism, going through to win the EU-wide award in the finals.

Writing under the pseudonym "Nosemonkey" he is the author of the blog Nosemonkey's EUtopia, for which he has been shortlisted for awards by The Guardian and Deutsche Welle. Formerly known as Europhobia, the blog rose to prominence for its coverage of the 7 July 2005 London bombings and subsequent campaign to raise money to buy emergency service workers a thank-you pint of beer. In 2007 it was named one of the UK's best blogs by the Metro newspaper, which said: "In the often fractious and shouty world of Britain's political blogs, J Clive Matthews' balanced, informed and entertaining writing on British and European politics manages to rise above the murk – whatever part of the political spectrum you live on. "

He is also a contributor to the Times Literary Supplement, the Press Gazette, the Guardian and openDemocracy among others, devised the University Association of Contemporary European Studies' academic group blog Ideas on Europe, and is the co-author (with Jim Smith) of two books in the Virgin Film series, one on director Tim Burton, the other on The Lord of the Rings.

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