Tom Morton Explained

Tom Morton
Birth Name:Thomas Morton
Birth Place:Carlisle, Cumberland, England
Occupation:Journalist, author, broadcaster
Spouse:Susan
Children:Includes James Morton
Website:Beatcroft.blogspot.co.uk

Thomas Morton (born 1955) is a Scottish broadcaster, journalist and author. He lives and works mainly in the Shetland Islands.

Life

Morton was born in 1955, and moved to Shetland in 1987, three years after his wife, Susan, who was a General Practitioner (GP).[1]

Until April 2015, Morton presented a BBC Radio Scotland show, broadcast Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights, from 10:00 PM to 1:00 AM, a Scottish take on rock and pop, from obscure blues to mainstream pop and soul, to current independent releases.[2]

From November 2011 until January 2015 he edited the magazine Shetland Life.[3]

Morton was a co-author, with his son James, of their 2016 book Shetland : Cooking on the Edge of the World.[1] James is known as a runner-up in series three of The Great British Bake Off in 2012.

Morton's book Holy Waters: Searching for the Sacred in a Glass, published in November 2022, was shortlisted for a Guild of Food Writers Award and won Drinks Book of the Year in the 2023 Fortnum & Mason Food and Drink writing awards.

In 2022, Morton was nominated as Scottish Labour's candidate in the local elections to Shetland Islands Council. He was one of three candidates nominated for three vacancies in the Shetland North Ward. As only three candidates stood, Morton became a councillor, unopposed.

Works

Morton's works, which encompass both fiction and non fiction,[4] include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Smith. Laura. 4 September 2018. Bake Off finalist James Morton teams up with dad Tom for book celebrating Shetland's fruits of land and sea. Sunday World. DC Thomson Media.
  2. https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-32721432 "Tom Morton stepping down from BBC Radio Scotland show"
  3. Web site: Broadcaster and journalist Tom Morton is named new Shetland Life editor. 7 October 2011. The Shetland Times.
  4. Web site: Tom Morton — Shetland Writing and Writers: Tom Morton. 8 August 2021. Shetland Islands Council.