Other Narrative Non-fiction – Jericho Writers
Jericho Writers
167-169 Great Portland street, 5th Floor, London, W1W 5PF
UK: +44 (0)330 043 0150
US: +1 (646) 974 9060

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Jon Curzon

Jon Curzon is a literary agent at Artellus Ltd., where he represents writers across fiction and non-fiction; from debut literary fiction (Kyra Wilder’s Little Bandaged Days and Ashleigh Bell Pedersen’s The Crocodile Bride) to titles in history and science (Christopher Othen’s The King of Nazi Paris and Lukasz Bednarski’s Lithium), and memoir (Emily Wells’s A Matter of Appearance). Books Jon has represented have been published in the UK, US, Germany, France, India, the Netherlands, South Korea, Greece – and have been reviewed and featured in the Guardian, The New York Times, The Telegraph, The Times, The TLS, and on Channel 4 News. In addition to his agenting work, Jon has also worked as a freelance editor for literary consultancies and creative writing courses since 2015.
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Rufus Purdy

Rufus Purdy is an experienced editor, currently working at Titan Books. He previously worked as a literary agent, running his own agency, and ran his own editorial-services company. He worked at Curtis Brown from 2012 to 2018, where he combined the roles of Editor, New Writing at Curtis Brown Creative and Editor at its digital imprint Studio 28. Highlights included being the editor for espionage-fiction author Alex Gerlis, who sold more than 180,000 copies of the novels they worked on together, and working with Squeeze songwriter Chris Difford on his memoir Some Fantastic Place (Weidenfeld & Nicolson). Many clients that he has worked with across his roles as editor and writing tutor have found publishing success, including: Paul Laird (The Birth and Impact of Britpop, Pen & Sword), Roisin Maguire (Bardo, Profile Books), Melissa Welliver (My Love Life and the Apocalypse, Chicken House), Natalie Lewis (Don’t Believe the Hype, Hodder), Loraine Peck (The Second Son, Text Publishing) and Adam Simcox (The Dying Squad, Gollancz).
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Brian Kimberling

Brian Kimberling is the author of two novels published in the US and UK, by Pantheon and Tinder Press respectively. He has also written for The New York Times, NPR, and others. Brian’s first novel, Snapper, about an aimless ornithologist in southern Indiana, was one of NPR’s Best Books of 2013. His second novel, Goulash, which is set in Prague, was also translated into Czech. Brian has an MA in Creative Writing from Bath Spa University and a long history of teaching, mentoring, collaborating with, or otherwise consorting with fresh distinctive talent. He has worked extensively in publishing and journalism. He has also written and produced three plays. His interests include short stories, climate change writing, and contemporary British domestic fiction. Every couple of years Brian re-reads The Odyssey and cooks the food Odysseus eats in between reads. Brian was born in southern Indiana, but for the last twenty years he has called southwestern England home.
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Deirdre Power

Deirdre began her publishing career in a literary agency, working with children’s authors and estates. Since then, she has gone on to work in children’s editorial at major publishing houses, working across everything from picture books to YA.   In 2023, she returned to agenting and joined David Higham Associates, assisting two company directors on their lists of children’s authors and illustrators. Their clients include Jacqueline Wilson, Michael Morpurgo, Liz Pichon, Cressida Cowell, Catherine Rayner, and Mike Brownlow, allowing Deirdre to work across a wide range of age categories and genres. She takes an editorial approach to agenting, working closely with new talent and debut authors on their manuscripts. During her time in editorial, she worked closely on submissions and manuscripts from writers including Faridah Àbíké-Íyímídé, Ravena Guron, Bill Hussey, and David Farr.   Before her start in publishing, Deirdre was a children’s bookseller for many years and tutored in creative writing while she earned her MPhil in Children’s Literature from Trinity College Dublin.   Deirdre brings a keen editorial eye and in-depth knowledge of the market, and spends more time reading children’s fiction than anything else. Having worked in both literary agencies and publishers, she has a strong understanding of how the process works from both sides, and what both agents and editors are hungry to read.
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Richard Roper

Richard is an author and experienced editor, having worked as a senior commissioning editor for non-fiction at Headline (part of Hachette UK), where he published several Sunday Times bestsellers. His debut, Something to Live For (commercial reading group fiction), was published by Orion (UK) and Penguin (US), and has sold in twenty languages. His second novel, When We Were Young, came out in 2021, followed by his third, This Disaster Loves You, in 2024. As an editor at Headline, he worked mainly in biography and narrative non-fiction. He has published memoirs by comedians James Acaster, Miles Jupp, Katy Wix, and Joel Dommett. He has also worked with the likes of Dave Davies of The Kinks, sports stars Steven Gerrard and Andy Murray, brands like Downton Abbey, and quirky narratives such as A Tomb With a View by Peter Ross. Find Richard on Twitter here: @richardroper
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Kate Rizzo

Kate Rizzo works as a Rights Director at a London literary agency, and has worked at agencies her entire publishing career. Her role in selling an author’s work abroad gives her a keen eye for what a manuscript needs to find a publishing home and captivate readers. She has sold translation rights for writers like Laura Barnett, Lucy Clarke, Kate Davies, Joseph Knox, Maria Realf, Holly Seddon, Clare Swatman, and Sarah Waters, and has worked for a number of bestselling writers in genres as broad as crime/thriller, women’s fiction, literary, memoir, narrative non-fiction and the sciences. Find Kate on Twitter here: @KateRizzz
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Vee Walker

Vee Walker is an author of fiction and non-fiction with a love of family history and heritage. Her novels are so closely based on archive material that they can be used as academic source texts. Vee’s debut novel, Major Tom’s War (Kashi House), evolved from a narrative non-fiction account of an unlikely WWI courtship into gripping historical fiction. Recently, her short story Nice Dog was shortlisted for the BBC Short Story Competition 2024. As part of this experience, she was interviewed by Kirsty Wark on BBC Radio 4’s Front Row and you can listen here (starting from around twelve minutes in). An abridged version of Nice Dog can be heard on BBC Sounds here. Vee honed her writing/editing skills as a heritage consultant for 20+ years, working with museums and natural/cultural/historic sites throughout the UK. Her poetry and descriptive writing can be found within unusual interpretive installations at historic houses, on mountains, in forests and along the coast. She has also been commissioned to write pieces of site-based drama by The Royal Geographical Society (Antarctic Science, 2001), British Waterways (the AHI Caliba Award-winning Harry’s Cut, set on the 1950s Birmingham canals network, 2002), and The National Trust for Scotland (#FindAleckie, 2019). Vee often runs creative writing workshops. Find Vee on Threads at @veewalkerwriters and on Facebook here.
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Katy Massey

Katy Massey is an author and former journalist. Her memoir, Are We Home Yet? (Jacaranda Books) was published in 2020 and was shortlisted for the Jhalak Prize and the Portico Prize. In addition, her fiction and non-fiction has been widely anthologised, including Common People edited by Kit de Waal from Unbound, The Place for Me, published by Scholastic, and upcoming speculative collection Glimpse, from Peepal Tree Press. She has recently delivered her first novel, an unusual take on the crime genre, to her agent. Katy has an MA and PhD in Creative Writing from Newcastle University. Find Katy on twitter here: @TangledRoots1 
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Clare Coombes

Clare Coombes is an author, editor and literary agent with over 15 years’ experience of writing and editing professionally. She is a co-founder of the first Liverpool-based literary agency, who has already closed a number of major multi-book deals for debut authors since launching in late 2020. Clare is a published author of two novels, Definitions (2015) and We Are of Dust (2018) – which received development funding from the Liverpool Film Office for a TV adaptation. Her experience spans the breadth of editorial services and includes work across a variety of forms including full fiction manuscripts, anthologies, non-fiction proposals and pitches for film and TV. She also has a background in PR and marketing, alongside teaching roles on creative writing programmes, including at post-graduate level, on topics from approaching an agent to self-editing.   Find Clare’s agency on Twitter here: @LiverpoolLit  
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Louise Tondeur

Louise Tondeur is a writer of fiction, poetry, plays, and non-fiction. Her published works include two novels, The Water’s Edge and The Haven Home for Delinquent Girls (Headline Review), a short story collection called Unusual Places (Cultured Llama, 2018), and non-fiction writing guides. Louise has an MA in Creative Writing, a PhD, and has worked as a Drama teacher and Creative Writing lecturer. She has supported countless writers with both written and verbal feedback, and brings her knowledge of theatre and creative writing into conversations with emerging writers. You can find more information about Louise here: www.louisetondeur.co.uk Find Louise on Twitter here: @LouiseTondeur
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Dexter Petley

Dexter is an acclaimed author and experienced editor. He has written several novels, a translation, literary non-fiction and a memoir of childhood. These include Little Nineveh (Polygon 1995), Joyride (Fourth Estate, 1999), White Lies (Fourth Estate 2003) and One True Void (Two Ravens Press 2008). Dexter publishes regularly and is now considered to be one of our most original British nature writers. He is one of the founding writers on the cult website Caught By The River, contributing chapters to both their nature anthologies. As a long serving editor with Jericho Writers, (since 2005) many of Dexter’s clients have achieved considerable success in finding agents and publishers. Among them is Costa shortlisted novelist, Elisa Lodato.
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Sharon Zink

Dr Sharon Zink is an author and former English Literature academic who has over eleven years’ experience of editing and creative writing teaching. Her first novel, Welcome to Sharonville (Unthank Books, 2014), was longlisted for The Guardian First Book Award and is currently being developed as a TV series. She has won numerous awards, such as being named as Young Poet of the Year and Writers Inc. Writer of the Year, as well as being shortlisted three times for The New Writer Short Story Award and for The Raymond Carver Prize. She is very proud that many of her clients have gone on to get agents and deals, including bestselling authors, Amanda Prowse and Kathryn Hughes, as well as the twice Macmillan-published, Mark Gartside, and Kate Glanville, whose books are with Accent and Penguin US. She has recently helped Helen Fisher’s novel become the lead title for Simon and Schuster in 2020. Find Sharon on Twitter here: @SharonZink
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Philip Womack

Philip is an author and Creative Writing lecturer. After graduating with a degree in Classics and English, he worked at Literary Review for four years, before becoming freelance in 2008 on publication of his first novel, The Other Book. Six novels for children followed, including The Liberators, The Double Axe and The Arrow of Apollo, and his first non-fiction work for adults, How to Teach Classics to Your Dog, was published in October 2020. He teaches Creative Writing to BA and MA students at London University, and has been a literary critic for nearly twenty years, as well as a freelance journalist for a variety of national newspapers and magazines, writing on topics such as education and literature, and even an article on pyjamas for Tatler magazine. He is currently on the Management Committee of the Society of Authors and a Contributing Editor to Literary Review. Find Philip on Twitter here: @WomackPhilip
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Louise Walters

Louise is an author, editor, mentor, and former indie publisher. She is the author of Mrs Sinclair’s Suitcase, published by Hodder & Stoughton in 2014, and has self-published four further novels: A Life Between Us (2017), The Road to California (2018), The Hermit (2022), and We Are Family (2024). Louise Walters Books ran from 2017 to 2023, and published mainly literary novels and novellas. Louise was also the original publisher of fantasy author Laura Laakso’s Wilde Investigations novels, now published by Bloodhound Books. Louise continues to work as Laura’s editor on the series. Louise has a degree in Literature from the Open University, is an alumni of the Jericho Writers Self Edit Your Novel course (2013), and was a volunteer with the Womentoring Project. Find Louise on Twitter here: @LouiseWalters12
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Kathie Weaver

Kathie Weaver is a screenplay, fiction, and nonfiction editor with more than 20 years of experience working with first-time writers to Academy Award and Pulitzer Prize winners. At DreamWorks Pictures and The Mount/Kramer Company, she developed scripts for highly-acclaimed writers and directors, including Horton Foote, Sydney Lumet, Roman Polanski, William Friedkin, Philip Noyce, and others. She has vast experience mentoring both beginning and seasoned screenwriters and authors through all stages of the writing process, from concept to final draft. Kathie studied English literature at Northwestern University and screenwriting at Columbia University.
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Paul Roberts

Paul Roberts is a writer and business consultant. His first book was published by The Economist in 2007 and is now in its third edition. He has had several further books published by Kogan Page, forming part of their hugely influential ‘Business Success’ series. Paul’s latest non-fiction book has been published by Routledge in their ‘Absolute Essentials’ series, causing Paul to realise, if ever proof was needed, that it is far harder to write a short book than a long one. Paul writes frequently for magazines and professional publications as diverse as the Independent, Evening Standard, Maxim and Viz comic. Paul has also written for television and has a novel nearing completion. As a reviewer, editor and teacher of creative writing, he has supported developing writers for many years.
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Emily Randle

Emily runs her own Editing and Rights Consulting business, working alongside indie authors, indie publishers and consulting for big name international literary agencies. During her time at the agency, she worked with best-selling authors such as Stephen Fry, Paula Hawkins, Owen Jones, Carole Matthews, Sarah Vaughan and Rosie Walsh, alongside national treasure children’s authors such as Michael Morpurgo and Jacqueline Wilson. She was runner up for the David Miller Bursary in the Deborah Rogers Rights Award 2017. At the start of 2020, Emily launched her own freelance book editing and rights selling business under the name Randle Editorial & Literary Consultancy. She also regularly consults for big literary agencies such as Janklow & Nesbit and Johnson & Alcock, in both Rights and Primary Agenting departments.
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Anastasia Parkes

Anastasia Parkes is an author with multiple creative personae. As Anastasia she has published a short story collection (Stabbing the Rain, 2013), and writes ‘human interest’ articles for The Times, The Daily Mail, The Lady, and The Tablet. These articles tackle, with humour and honesty, intensely personal topics such as single motherhood, older parenthood, living with multiple sclerosis, and life as a young English teacher in 1980s Cairo. She has written two novels under the pseudonym Maria Lucas: Daddy’s Girl (2016), and Loved Ones (2017). As Primula Bond she is the successful author of the classy and explosive erotic romance Unbreakable trilogy The Silver Chain (2013), The Golden Locket (2013) and The Diamond Ring (2014), published by HarperCollins. Primula has delivered workshops at the York Festival of Writing and Eroticon in Bristol on how to write sex scenes and Anastasia has taught general short story techniques. Anastasia has an MA in English Literature. She has worked as a Jericho Editor for over 10 years, covering a range of fiction and non-fiction genres.   Find Anastasia on Twitter/X here: @AnastasiaParkes Find Primula on Twitter/X here: @PrimulaBond
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Martin Ouvry

Martin is a writer, editor, teacher and musician. He has more than twenty years’ experience as a writer, reviewer, manuscript assessor, structural editor, writing teacher, mentor, line-editor, copy-editor and proofreader. His fiction has appeared in a range of world-renowned publications including Esquire, The London Magazine and New Writing (Picador). His article ‘How creative writing courses benefit a writer’ has been reprinted twice in the Writers’ and Artists’ Yearbook (2023, 2024, 2025). He recently completed his novel The Cost of Loving with the generous support of Arts Council England. Martin has received numerous prizes for his work, including first- and final-year prizes for outstanding achievement (University of East Anglia BA), the Alumni Association prize for fiction (UEA MA), a Hawthornden Fellowship, two Arts Council writer’s awards, and a Wingate Scholarship in literature. He has taught widely, for the British Council, the Arts Council, at City University of London, UEA, Imperial College London and elsewhere. You can find more information about Martin here.
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Liz Monument

Liz Monument is an author, writing all kinds of fiction including sci-fi, historical, and horror. Liz’s debut novel, The Eternity Fund was short-listed for Mslexia Magazine’s unpublished novel competition in 2013, becoming a talking book in 2014 (Audible.co.uk), and a paperback in 2015 (Fahrenheit Press). Liz’s second novel Iteration (Fahrenheit Press) was on the submissions list for the Arthur C Clarke Award, 2018. Her third novel, Transcendence, was written for a PhD in Creative Writing. She believes that the mechanics of fiction are identical whether you’re writing literary, genre, or hybrids, and that the same principles can be applied to improve a manuscript regardless of its subject matter or style. Before becoming a full-time novelist and editor, Liz specialised in adult education and taught in the creative arts field for 22 years. As of 2021, Liz is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland.
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Haydn Middleton

Haydn Middleton has been an author and tutor for almost forty years. He has written extensively for both adults and children. His nine novels for adults, marketed variously as literary fiction and fantasy, include The Ballad of Syd & Morgan which was dramatized in 2023 on BBC Radio 4 and his most recent novel for children is The Girl Who Said No To The Nazis (Pushkin Children’s, 2020). Since 2015 he has taught Creative Writing for Stanford University’s Oxford Program, and more recently for the Sarah Lawrence Programme at Wadham College, Oxford. Before becoming a freelance author of children’s fiction and non-fiction – producing scores of books on subjects ranging from Emmeline Pankhurst to jellyfish – he worked as a history schoolbook editor at Oxford University Press. You can find more information here: www.haydnmiddleton.com.
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Lesley McDowell

Lesley McDowell is the author of fiction, non-fiction, and short stories, and was formerly a literary critic for major newspaper. Lesley has three published novels, The Picnic (Black & White Publishing), Unfashioned Creatures (Saraband) and Clairmont (Wildfire 2024), as well as a work of non-fiction, Between the Sheets: The Literary Liaisons of Nine 20th Century Women Writers (Overlook Duckworth 2010). Her new book, ‘Love and Other Poisons’ (Wildfire) is due out July 2025 She is the recipient of three Creative Scotland awards, a Society of Authors grant, and was Writer in Residence at Gladstone’s Library in 2014. She has also been a judge for several literary awards, and chairs regularly at book festivals. Prior to working as an editorial consultant, Lesley worked for many years as a literary critic, reviewing regularly for The Independent on Sunday, The Sunday Herald, the Scotsman, The Times Literary Supplement, and others. You can find her on Twitter @LesleyMcDowell1, or on Instagram at lesleywrites.
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Mark Leggatt

Mark is a manuscript assessor, editor and author who’s twice topped Blackwell’s bestseller list. He’s the author of three books – Names of the Dead, The London Cage, and The Silk Road – and an Associate Editor for Fledgling Press. As an author, he is represented by literary agent Jon Wood at RCW. Mark has produced detailed editorial reports, manuscript assessments and submission reviews for clients in the UK, EU and North America. He also provides expert advice on submission packs, and how to grab the reader from the first page of your novel. He began his writing career taking advice and receiving manuscript assessments by professionals on his own debut novel, so he knows what it takes to become published and secure an agent.
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Jenny Knight

Jenny Knight is a prize-winning author of short story and memoir, and a contributor to Kit de Waal’s celebrated Common People anthology (Unbound, May 2019). Her latest book will published later this year as one of the three lead titles of a brand-new imprint from HarperCollins – Akan Books. An experienced editor, mentor, copy-writer, copy-editor and proofreader, she’s enjoyed 25 years’ successful freelancing for clients and publishers including Macmillan, Simon & Schuster and Routledge, and her writing on writing and the publishing world has appeared in Book Machine, National Writers’ Centre and Restless. Jenny has won or been shortlisted in competitions including Bridport, Fish, Arvon, ACE/Escalator, Yeovil, Riptide and SWWJ. She is an Associate Artist with the National Writing Centre, has a degree in English Literature and Drama, and studied Creative Writing at UEA. Instagram @jennyaknight   Bluesky @jennyknight   X @knightjennyk
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Pauline Kiernan

Dr Pauline Kiernan is an award-winning playwright, commissioned screenwriter and prize-winning short story writer. She has been a literary consultant for 12 years and has taught Creative Writing on Oxford University’s Creative Writing Undergraduate and MA programmes. Pauline is a former lecturer at the University of Oxford and a Shakespeare scholar, and was appointed Leverhulme Fellowship at Shakespeare’s Globe to work with Mark Rylance and the directors and actors in its first six years as dramaturg and research resource. She is the author of the snappily-entitled Screenwriting They Can’t Resist: How to Create Screenplays of Originality and Cinematic Power – Break The Rules and is a theatre and film consultant. Her monographs, Shakespeare’s Theory of Drama, and Staging Shakespeare at the New Globe were published to worldwide acclaim, and her best-selling Filthy Shakespeare: Shakespeare’s Most Outrageous Sexual Puns was an Observer Book of the Year. She is currently writing the first of a series of crime novels set in Italy, and a book about Keats.
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Sam Jordison

Sam Jordison is an author and co-director at Galley Beggar Press, the award-winning indie press. He has extensive editorial experience and knowledge of the book world – and has also been on the other side of the fence, having written several best-selling works of non-fiction, including the notorious Crap Towns series (Boxtree, Pan Macmillan), the best-selling I Spy for adults series, a book about Literary London (co-authored with Eloise Millar), political books like Enemies Of The People and The 10 Worst Of Everything. As a journalist, he mainly writes for The Guardian, and mainly about books. He runs the Not The Booker Prize, and the Guardian’s online book club, The Reading Group. He has also taught about publishing on several Creative Writing university courses, as well as teaching a course on publishing at Greenwich University and journalism at UEA. Find Sam on Twitter here: @samjordison
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Julie Hoyle

Julie Hoyle is an editor with a broad range of copy-editing and proofreading experience. Julie edits fiction in a variety of genres from crime to romance, from fantasy to comedy, short stories, poetry collections and children’s books. She has worked on non-fiction texts and case studies in the areas of psychology, self-help and autobiographies. Julie has also worked on educational publications such as a new reading scheme, KS1, 2 and 3 maths workbooks, student planners and teaching posters. Julie has written numerous book blurbs which have been complimented by the authors. She is a very conscientious worker and has a great eye for detail. Prior to becoming an editor, Julie worked for 34 years as a teacher, where she enhanced her editing skills while assisting students.
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Claire Gillman

Claire is an experienced journalist, writer and editor. Until last year she was the Editor of Kindred Spirit, the UK’s leading mind/body/spirit magazine. She has been coaching and mentoring writers for nearly 15 years. She has been a freelance contributor to leading women’s magazines and national newspapers, particularly The Times and the Guardian, and has also been editor of a number of consumer and specialist women’s magazines including Health & Fitness magazine and Girl About Town. Claire has written 30 non-fiction books for adults and creative non-fiction titles for children, some under the pen-name, Rory Storm. Among her titles are three books in the Hodder Teach Yourself series on how to get published and how to make money from freelance writing. She has coached authors for top publishing houses and has also run writers’ workshops, always with the emphasis on fun, style and discovering your inner creativity. Claire is married with two grown-up sons and lives on the edge of the West Pennines with her family and dog. For more information, go to www.clairegillman.com.
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Helen Francis

Helen Francis has worked in publishing for 23 years, in both publishing houses and literary agencies. Previously, Helen worked as a fiction project editor at Faber and Faber for nine years, and as a commissioning fiction editor at Head of Zeus for two. She also ran the Classics list at Vintage, Penguin Random House, and was a freelance commissioning editor for Arcadia Books. Helen has also worked at literary agencies Abner Stein Associates and MBB Creative, as well as an international book scout for many years. Helen has taught creative writing and editing at Bath Spa University, Roehampton University, and the University of East London. Authors she’s edited and published include Victor Lodato (twice shortlisted for the Sunday Times Short story Award), Sophie Hardach (shortlisted for the 2019 Costa Novel Award), Laurie Canciani and Michelle Paver (Sunday Times bestselling author of WAKENHRST). At Faber, she worked with authors such as Kazuo Ishiguro, Edna O’Brien, Andy O’Hagan and Sarah Hall. You can find Helen on X here: @Helen_E_Francis
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Rosie Fiore

Rosie Fiore is an author and has worked as a mentor and editor in theatre, television, magazines, advertising, comedy and the corporate market for more than 30 years. She is a tutor on our bestselling online Ultimate Novel Writing Course. Rosie has had eight novels published. She is published by Struik, Quercus and Allen & Unwin under her own name. This Year’s Black and Babies in Waiting were both longlisted for the South African Sunday Times Literary Award. Rosie is also published by Orion as Cass Hunter. The After Wife was translated into nine languages and optioned for a film in China. Rosie has an MA in Creative Writing and is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. She is a teacher of creative writing, effective business writing and English. She has also studied playwriting with the National Theatre. Her most recent dramatic project was a stage adaptation of Dracula. Find Rosie on Twitter here: @rosiefiore
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Diana Collis

Diana has 25 years of experience in writing and editing non-fiction, specialising in Mind, Body and Spirit. She has worked extensively with Orion (Laurence King), and on specific titles with editorial teams at Quarto (Kaddo), Hay House, Dorling Kindersley and Flare Publishing. Diana has years of editing and mentoring experience in Memoir and more general non-fiction work for Jericho Writers. Whilst Mind, Body and Spirit is her specialism, manuscript focuses have included areas as diverse as interior design, diet/food/cookery, hypnotherapy, parenting/family issues, meditation, mountain trekking, feng shui, positive attitude, religious and transcendental experiences, travel and immigration, addiction recovery, healing, and physical and mental health challenges. Most of her Jericho Writers authors have gone on to either win contracts with agents and publishers or successfully self-publish their work—frequently with excellent reviews on Amazon. A strong technical ability in writing and an honours degree in English, Drama and Film, combine with practical experience in the holistic field to make Diana uniquely able to appreciate the challenges of conveying material in both niche and traditional areas. She enjoys author support as much as developing her own projects, which, in recent years, have included consultancy and writing for the bestselling, Tattoo Tarot: Ink & Intuition deck/booklet set (attracting over 1, 350 positive reviews on Amazon), plus a follow-up Tattoo Tarot Journal book, further, similar projects of Movie Tarot and Music Tarot, and research for the text of the Tarot Colouring Book, all with Laurence King Publishing.
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Wes Brown

Wes Brown is a writer, editor and researcher with a background in the publishing industry and many years’ experience of teaching creative writing. Wes was the founding editor of Dead Ink Books, young writer’s co-ordinator at the National Association of Writers in Education and has worked freelance for many literature organisations. He has written for the Times Literary Supplement, Literary Review, New Humanist and his debut novel, Breaking Kayfabe, was published by Bluemoose in 2023. Wes has taught Creative Writing at the University of Kent, the University of East London and the City Lit and he’s also been awarded a CHASE PhD scholarship to research Narrative Non-Fiction. In 2021, he undertook research at the University of East Anglia as part of a collaborative project investigating the future of literature and the written word. Wes strongly believes in working with authors to achieve their own artistic ideals rather than project his own. Wes loves non-fiction narratives, memoirs, literary and speculative fiction. Find Wes on Twitter here: @wesbrownwriter
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Natasha Bell

Natasha Bell is an author, PhD researcher and creative writing teacher. Her debut psychological thriller, His Perfect Wife, was published by Penguin in 2018 and her second novel, This Nowhere Place, came out in 2021. She’s also published short stories, memoir and creative non-fiction. Natasha holds an MA in Creative and Life Writing from Goldsmiths and is currently working on a practice-led PhD in autofiction. She teaches introductory and novel-writing courses at City Lit, mentors for The Riff Raff, and previously worked as a sub-editor at The Press Association. She loves narrative in all forms, but has a particular passion for psychological suspense, women’s fiction and stories that blur the line between truth and fiction. Find Natasha on Twitter here: @byTashB
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