The story of Josephine Cox is as extraordinary as anything in her
novels. Born in a cotton-mill house in Blackburn, she was one of ten
children. Her parents, she says, brought out the worst in each
other, and life was full of tragedy and hardship - but not without
love and laughter.
At the age of sixteen, Josephine met and married 'a caring and wonderful
man', and had two sons. When the boys started school, she decided
to go to college and eventually gained a place at Cambridge University,
though was unable to take this up as it would have meant living away
from home.
However, she did go into teaching, while at the same time helping
to renovate the derelict council house that was their home, copingwith
the problems caused by her mother's unhappy home life - and writing
her first full-length novel. Not surprisingly, she then won the `Superwoman
of Great Britain` Award, for which her family had secretly entered
her, and this coincided with the acceptance of her first novel for
publication.
Josephine has now given up teaching in order to write full time. She
says 'I love writing, both recreating scenes and characters from my
past, together with new storylines which mingle naturally with the
old. I could never imagine a single day without writing, and it's
been that way since as far back as I can remember'. Her previous novels
of North Country life are all available from Headline and are immensely
popular. Josephine Cox, now lives in Oxfordshire with her husband,
Ken.