Tag: Authors

Susan Brownrigg Starts Writing Her First Children’s Novel

Susan Brownrigg is a Lancashire lass who grew up in Wigan and now lives in Skelmersdale, but loves to visit Blackpool as often as possible! She is the author of Gracie Fairshaw and the Mysterious Guest, Gracie Fairshaw and the Trouble at the Tower, Gracie Fairshaw and the Missing Reel, Kintana and the Captain’s Curse and Wrong Tracks. Brownrigg has worked as a library information assistant for three years and her previous career was in heritage and wildlife education. She worked at Norton Priory Museum for 12 years, most recently as learning manager. She has also worked at Tatton Park,… Read more »

Michael Harvey Teacher, Actor and Writer Arrives in Blackpool

Blackpool lost one of its greatest treasures on 22 June 2024, a marvellous thinker and fountain of literary and theatrical knowledge, and always happy to share the wealth of his insight. One of his many remarkable talents was his ability to recite countless lines of great prose from Dickens to Wordsworth, or dialogue from great movies, plays or musicals. Michael was born in Oxford on 8 July 1935. His father was a percussionist in a theatre orchestra for all his working life, his mother a housewife; and happy to be that to care for Michael and his younger sister Margaret. His… Read more »

Susan Varley’s Badger’s Parting Gifts Gets Published

Susan Varley is a British illustrator and author of children’s picture books. She was born in 1961 in Blackpool. Her best known book is Badger’s Parting Gifts, a story which aims to be a gentle introduction to old age and bereavement for young children. She both wrote and illustrated the book, and it was awarded the Mother Goose Award in 1985. Susan – who attended Baines Endowed Primary and Elmslie Girls School (background image). Varley studied graphic design and illustration at Manchester Polytechnic. Badger’s Parting Gifts was Susan Varley’s first book, it was published by Andersen Press in 1984. A… Read more »

Nathan Parker Releases First Book

Nathan Parker is an independent author and spoken artist from Blackpool. Proud of his northern roots, Nathan is a keen champion of northern voices, committed to enabling people of all ages to engage with words, stories and conversations. He has a background in Youth Work, having worked in the community, schools, colleges and hostels in Blackpool and the North-West for over 13 years. His vision is to combine youth work values and approaches with the topic of literacy to engage and motivate people to access reading, writing and storytelling, removing barriers and enabling confidence. Nathan is proud of his northern roots… Read more »

Roy Calley’s Blackpool: A Complete Record is Published

Roy Calley is a journalist who works for the BBC in Salford but was brought up in Blackpool, but now lives full-time in Nice, France. He joined the BBC in 1990 at Radio Lancashire, working as a sports journalist. Three years later he joined BBC GMR in Manchester and was the morning sports reporter on the breakfast programme, as well as presenting his own sports preview show every Friday night. He then moved to BBC Radio Leeds, where, despite being a Lancastrian, he reported on the fortunes of Yorkshire County Cricket Club for the local stations. That was followed by… Read more »

Roy Fuller Gets His First Poetry Book Published

Roy Broadbent Fuller CBE (11 February 1912 – 27 September 1991) was an English poet and writer, best known for his contributions to poetry. Born in Failsworth, Lancashire, to Leopold Charles Fuller and Nellie Broadbent, his early life was shaped by a lower-middle-class background. His father, who had a difficult start in life as the illegitimate son of Minnie Augusta Fuller, worked his way up to become the works manager and later a director of a rubber-proofing mill in Hollinwood, Greater Manchester, before passing away in 1920. After his father’s death, Fuller was raised in Blackpool and attended Blackpool High… Read more »

Allen Clarke’s ‘Moorlands and Memories’ is First Published

One hundred years ago, Allen Clarke, a former mill worker from Bolton, created a masterpiece titled Moorlands and Memories, subtitled Rambles and Rides in the Fair Places of Steam-Engine Land. The book was first published in 1920 by Tillotson’s of Bolton, the newspaper company behind The Bolton Evening News, which later became today’s Bolton News. Allen Clarke passed away in December 1935, having continued to walk and cycle right up to the end of his life. It is unfortunate that there is no memorial to him in Bolton, his hometown. However, Little Marton Mill, located on the outskirts of Blackpool,... Read more »

Sports Historian Gerry Wolstenholme Writes First Book

Born in Blackpool, Gerry Wolstenholme is an author and sports historian from Blackpool who wrote about football and cricket. He penned his first book in 1992 and became a strong supporter of Blackpool F.C. He attended Northlands school between the ages of three and five, and then Devonshire Road School in Blackpool and Baines Grammar School in Poulton-le-Fylde. He saw an advertisement for Civil Service examinations and decided to take them. He passed, and moved to London to begin working at Her Majesty's Treasury in Whitehall. He was promoted, and worked in the office of the Chancellor of the Exchequer. He... Read more »

Joseph Delaney Gets an Agent

Joseph Henry Delaney was an English author, best known for his children’s dark fantasy series, Spook’s, inspired by the folklore, history and geography of Lancashire. The series has been published in 30 countries, achieving sales of over 4.5 million copies. He was born on 25 July 1945 in Preston, Lancashire, the son of a labourer. He was the oldest of four children. As a child, Delaney had a recurring nightmare where he sat with his mother while she knitted, when, suddenly, a shadowy figure emerged from the coal cellar, picked him up, and carried him into darkness. Delaney attended Preston… Read more »

Desmond Bagley Novel Gets Made into a Paul Newman Movie

Desmond Bagley was born on 29 October 1923 in Kendal, Westmorland (now Cumbria), to John and Hannah Bagley. In the summer of 1935, when he was 12, his family relocated to Blackpool. Soon after the move, he left school and took on various jobs, including working as a printer’s assistant and in a factory. During the Second World War, he was employed in the aircraft industry, though his lifelong stutter initially exempted him from military conscription. Bagley became widely known as both a journalist and a novelist, earning a reputation for his gripping thrillers. Alongside fellow British writers such as… Read more »