He moved to New York, where he began writing freelance articles for
The Village Voice and
McCalls, often centered on
fashion, social issues or the media. After two years in New York, he returned to London to become Men's Wear Editor of
The Sunday Times and a regular contributor to the Magazine with articles on
Donyale Luna and the
Houston Astrodome.
Ernest Hecht of Souvenir Press commissioned a “fashion novel”, preferably centred on
Carnaby Street.
The Rag Dolls (1968) was the first of four novels published in UK and United States which Carlton wrote under the pen-name Simon Cooper. He used his real name on a novel for the first time for the 1988 novel
Labels, (
Bantam Books) which sold over a million copies in USA, and was translated into many languages, including Hebrew. It has been published three separate times in the UK. His first non-fiction book,
The Scarf, a history of the silk scarf, followed. (Stuart Tabori Chang 1989).
Sacrifice, another novel for Bantam Books, was published in 1991. His childhood memoir about an eccentric family:
The Handsomest Sons In the World, (
Duckworth, 2001), was one of the
London Sunday Times “100 Best Books” of that year, one of six in the biography category. He returned to fiction with
Heaven, Hell & Mademoiselle (
Orion, 2010) a novel of the 1968 Paris fashion world where ‘Mademoiselle’ is
Coco Chanel herself. The following year, 2011, Orion Books re-published
Labels, now itself labelled as “a cult classic”. == Bibliography ==