A fascinating insight into the life of one of the country's bestselling and best-loved authors, marrying her work with her extraordinary life, and looking at her rise to fame and fortune against all the odds.‘Everything I have touched in my life figures in my books. Every single book I write has something that has happened to me or my family or to my friends.’Josephine Cox was born in Blackburn during its decline as the cotton-weaving capital of the world. Life was hard but characterful, the joys and tragedies of her youth later inspiring her multi-million selling novels.One of ten children, Josephine knew poverty, hunger and charity. Between births, her mother worked in the cotton mills, her father on the roads. Sleeping up to six in a bed, her family lived in the tightly packed, working-class terraces of Blackburn. But Josephine never felt victimised or shamed.Transforming their closed-in community into one that inspired ‘another kind of love, a deep sense of belonging’ were the characters Josephine writes about in her novels with such fondness and feeling.But alas reality was not always so easy. Hand in hand with poverty came deprivation and domestic difficulties. At the end of her tether, Jo’s mother gathered her children around her in the bus station one day and announced they were leaving Blackburn. Josephine was fourteen years old. Not only did she lose her friends, she also lost her brothers too who were left behind. ‘Belonging to a street, to a place, to a family, is the most important thing.’ Out of this tremendous loss, Josephine’s novels were born.
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Piers Dudgeon. Child of the North
Child of the North. Memories of a Northern Childhood. Piers Dudgeon with Josephine Cox
Table of Contents
FOREWORD by Josephine Cox
Maps
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER ONE The Web of Life
CHAPTER TWO The Hungry Poor
CHAPTER THREE Stratagem and Strife
CHAPTER FOUR Betrayed
CHAPTER FIVE The Full, Vicious Circle
CHAPTER SIX Broken Hearts
CHAPTER SEVEN Leaving Home
CHAPTER EIGHT New Landscapes
Acknowledgements
About the Author. Child of the North. MEMORIES OF A NORTHERN CHILDHOOD
By the same author:
Novels by Josephine Cox
Copyright
About the Publisher
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Cover Page
Title Page
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By now most of the machines had ground to a halt. But, when Marcia emerged from changing her slippers for shoes, she saw little groups of mill-hands standing about and conversing in whispers. From a distance, she could see Daisy crying, with old Bertha comforting her. Some of the other women were stark-eyed, with their hands flattened over their mouths as though to stifle any sound that might come out.
Going to where old Bertha had young Daisy enclosed in her arms, Marcia asked in a soft voice, subdued by the sight of wretched faces all about her, ‘What is it, Bertha? Whatever’s going on?’