Marie Joseph

Marie Joseph (b. Lancashire, England) was a British writer of short-stories in magazines, 16 romance novels and a book about her arthritis. In 1987, her novel A Better World Than won the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association.[1]

Marie Joseph
BornLancashire, England, UK
Pen nameMarie Joseph
OccupationNovelist
LanguageEnglish
NationalityBritish
Period1960s–1992
GenreRomance
Notable awardsRoNA Award
Spouseyes
Children2

Biography

Personal life

Marie Joseph was born in Lancashire, England, UK, and was educated at Blackburn High School for Girls. She was in the Civil Service, before her marriage with a chartered Engineer. They had two daughters, now married, and eight grandchildren. She lived in Middlesex with her retired husband. [2]

Career

Marie Joseph started to write at the age of 40, and she managed to publish in journals during the 1960s and 1970s, the stories are reedited in collection in the 1990s. She published her first long romance novel in 1975. In 1976, she wrote a book about her life with arthritis. She continued publishing romance novels until 1992.

Bibliography

Single novels

  • The Guilty Party (1975)
  • One Step at a Time (1976)
  • Ring-a-roses (1979)
  • Maggie Craig (1980)
  • A Leaf in the Wind (1980)
  • Emma Sparrow (1981)
  • Gemini Girls (1982)
  • The Listening Silence (1983)
  • Lisa Logan (1984)
  • Polly Pilgrim (1984)
  • The Clogger's Child (1985) aka Prelude (US title)
  • The Travelling Man (1989)
  • Since He Went Away (1992)

Daisy's World

  1. A Better World Than This (1986)
  2. A World Apart (1988)

Collections of short stories

  • Passing Strangers and Other Stories (1987)
  • When Love Was Like That: A Collection of Short Stories (1991)
  • The Way We Were: A Collection of Short Stories (1994)
  • A Time to Remember: A Collection of Short Stories (1997)

Non-fiction

  • Footsteps in the Park (1976)

References and sources

  1. Awards by the Romantic Novelists' Association, 3 October 2012
  2. Mandy Hicken; Raymond John Prytherch (1994), Now Read On... A guide to contemporary popular fiction, Scolar Press, p. 442
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.