Rosie Harris
Rosie Harris | |
---|---|
Born | Marion Rose Young 12 July 1925 Cardiff, United Kingdom |
Occupation | Novelist |
Nationality | British |
Period | 2000–present |
Genre | Romance novel |
Marion Rose Harris (known professionally as Rosie Harris and born Marion Rose Young on 12 July 1925) is a British author of romantic fiction. Her work is mainly set in Liverpool and Cardiff in the 1920s and 1930s.[1]
Biography
[edit]Harris was born in Cardiff, but from the age of five she went to live with her grandparents and grew up in an isolated cottage in the Dorset countryside. As a result of being a very lonely only child, she had plenty of time to read and also to dream up stories which she told to her imaginary friends.[a] After leaving Gillingham Grammar School, she went back to Cardiff and worked as a clerk in the City Hall. It was here that she met and married a Grenadier Guardsman. She moved from Cardiff to his home on Merseyside and grew to know the Wallasey and Liverpool area.[citation needed]
Her writing career started as a freelance writer, writing for the Liverpool Echo and national magazines on fashion, homemaking and health topics under the by-line Marion Harris. Her first novel was published in 1975, followed by eight others all under the name Marion Harris. Additionally, she has written about twenty non-fiction books all under different pseudonyms.[citation needed] Ten years later, and with three children, Harris and her family moved to Buckinghamshire where she has lived ever since. Her children have all made their homes in the area and she now has six grandchildren and four great-grandchild.
Current work
[edit]Since 2000, Harris has been writing as Rosie Harris. She has focused on romance sagas. These works are all set in the 1920s and 1930s and concentrate on strong and courageous female characters. As of 2015, she is published by Heinemann and Arrow Books Ltd, an imprint of Random House.[2]
Bibliography
[edit]As Marion Harris
[edit]- Soldiers' Wives (1986)
- Officers' Ladies (1987)
- Amelda (1989)
- Heart of the Dragon (1988)
- Just a Handsome Stranger (1990)
- Nesta (1999)
- Sighing for the Moon (1999)
- Captain of Her Heart (2000)
As Rosie Harris
[edit]- *Turn of the Tide (2002)
- *Troubled Waters (2002)
- *Patsy of Paradise Place (2002)
- *One Step Forward (2003)
- *Looking for Love (2003)
- *Winnie of the Waterfront (2004)
- *Pins and Needles (2004)
- *The Cobbler's Kids (2005)
- *Sunshine and Showers (2005)
- *At Sixes and Sevens (2005)
- *Megan of Merseyside (2006)
- *The Power of Dreams (2006)
- *Sunshine and Shadows (2006)
- *A Mother's Love (2006)
- *Sing for Your Supper (2007)
- *Waiting for Love (2007)
- *Love Against All Odds (2007)
- *A Dream of Love (2008)
- *A Love Like Ours (2008)
- *Love Changes Everything (2009)
- *The Quality of Love (2009)
- *Whispers of Love (2010)
- *Ambitious Love (2010)
- *The Price of Love (2011)
- *A Brighter Dawn (2011)
- *Hell Hath No Fury (2013)
- *Stolen Moments (2013)
- *Love or Duty (2014)
- *Guarded Passions (2014)
- *Moving On (2015)
- *The Mixture As Before (2015)
- *Heartbreak and Happiness (forthcoming)
Notes
[edit]- ^ Information retrieved from http://www.rosiebooks.co.uk on 21 February 2008.
References
[edit]- ^ Europa Publications (2003). International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004. Taylor & Francis Group. p. 244. ISBN 9781857431797. Retrieved 23 January 2022.
- ^ Rosie Harris on Random House website [1].
External links
[edit]- Official website
- The story behind Hell Hath No Fury - Online Essay by Rosie Harris at Upcoming4.me
- Marion Harris at Fantastic Fiction
- Rosie Harris at Fantastic Fiction