Children’s – 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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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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Becky Stradwick

Becky has worked in the industry for 23 years, as a publisher, literary agent and bookseller. As Editorial Director at Penguin Random House, she published authors such as Susan Cooper, James Dashner, Jason Segel, Cassandra Clare, Holly Black, Damian Dibben, Ellie Irving, Fox Benwell, Nancy Holder, Debbie Viguie, Lauren Kate, John Stephens, Heather Demetrios, Rosemary Clement Moore and Michael Scott. As literary agent at Darley Anderson’s, she represented authors including Phil Earle, Michelle Harrison, Carmen Reid, Jenna Burtenshaw, Rob Stevens, Adrienne Kress and Lisa Clark. Before this she worked as a bookseller, managing Books etc branches, before becoming Head of Children’s books for Borders UK, where she won Children’s Bookseller of the Year two years running. She has written for THE ARTISTS AND WRITERS YEARBOOK, THE BOOKSELLER and PUBLISHING NEWS. Some of her favourite authors include Philip Pullman, Malorie Blackman, Jonathan Stroud, Akwaeke Emezi and Elizabeth Wein. Her all-time favourite books are THE BORRIBLE TRILOGY by Michael Larrabeiti, WATERSHIP DOWN by Richard Adams and HIS DARK MATERIALS by Philip Pullman.
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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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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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Cecile Shanahan

Cecile is an experienced editor and proofreader who adores helping writers to make their words shine. She has a special interest in children’s and young adult literature and educational publishing, but often works on general fiction and non-fiction titles too. Cecile Shanahan has tertiary qualifications in Professional Editing and Proofreading, Secondary Education, English Literature and Journalism. Since joining Jericho Writers, she has assisted more than 20 authors to progress their writing projects through agent submission pack assessments, manuscript assessments, developmental edits, copy edits, line edits, proofreading and post-editorial support.
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Naomi Jones

Naomi Jones is an author and has over eight years’ experience working in children’s publishing. She began her career at Puffin (Penguin Random House) before moving to Orion and then Hachette Children’s Group. Her previous experience as a Rights Manager brings invaluable insight into maximising a book’s sales potential and she has worked closely with both UK and international editors to develop a good knowledge of global publishing markets and trends. Her picture books are published by OUP and HarperCollins. They have won and been shortlisted for multiple awards and are now translated into 19 languages. Naomi has a BA (Hons) in English Studies and was the children’s book reviewer for award winning family travel blog Mini Travellers for over three years and a long-listing judge and mentor for the Jericho Prize. Naomi has been working as a freelance editor and mentor helping other children’s writers to develop their manuscripts and craft for over six years. Find Naomi on Twitter here: @NaomiJones_1
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Em Norry

Em Norry is a fiction and non-fiction MG/YA author, with her books being published by Scholastic, Puffin, Oxford University Press, Bloomsbury, and Hodder Education. She writes under both Em Norry and E. L. Norry. Her books include Son of the Circus (2019, Scholastic), The Extraordinary Life of Nelson Mandela (2020, Puffin), Amber Undercover (2021, OUP), Football Legends #5: Lionel Messi (2021, Scholastic), Mary Prince (2022, Scholastic), Fable House (2023, Bloomsbury), Fable House: Heart of Fire (2024, Bloomsbury). She has had short stories published in the following collections: Home Again: Stories about Coming Home from War (2020, Scholastic), Happy Here (2021, Knights Of), The Place for Me: Stories from the Windrush (2021, Scholastic), A Very Merry Murder Club (2021, Farshore), The Super Sunny Murder Club (2024, Farshore). Em has previously written for a younger age group of reluctant and dyslexic readers: A Good Friend (Hodder Education). Find Em on X here: @elnorry_writer More information can be found at https://elnorry.com/
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Chloë Rayban

Chloë Rayban is best known for her YA novels. Her wacky, humorous ‘Justine’ novels have been shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal and twice for the Guardian Fiction Prize. One of them was made into a feature film by Columbia Tristar. Over the past twenty-five years, her books have been published by Random House, Harper Collins, Hodder, Headline and Bloomsbury. She enjoys writing for all age groups, YA, Middle Grade and Early Readers. Under her real name – Carolyn Bear – OUP publishes her books for younger children, the most popular being the Scrapman series, which sells worldwide, most recently in China. She says her books “grew up with her children” and she now also writes both fiction and non-fiction for adults. Find out more on chloeraybanbooks.com
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Sarah Naughton

Sarah Naughton is a Costa shortlisted and bestselling author of YA and psychological thrillers and is published in eleven territories. Her debut novel, The Hanged Man Rises (Simon & Schuster), was shortlisted for the Costa Children’s Book Award in 2013. Another historical YA novel followed before she was approached by Orion to write psychological thrillers. Tattletale was an Amazon bestseller, as were The Other Couple, The Mothers and The Festival. The Mothers was The Sunday Times Crime Book of the Month. She also likes to dip her toe in horror, with short story ebooks The Last Gift, and Get Them Out of My Head for the No Sleep Podcast. Sarah published a YA thriller in October 2023 called You Better Watch Out and another in May 2024 called Your Time is Up. She has been working with Anthony Horowitz and Storytel on the Becoming Sherlock series, which are entirely new Sherlock Holmes stories written primarily for the audiobook format. The first in the series, The Red Circle, was released exclusively on Storytel in December 2023. Find Sarah on Twitter here: @sarahjnaughton
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Teresa Heapy

Teresa has worked in children’s publishing for 27 years. She’s an editor and an award-winning author, with 11 picture books and 80 educational books published. Teresa worked in-house as a Commissioning Editor for Heinemann and Oxford University Press before going freelance, and now combines editorial work with writing picture books and books for young readers. She has worked with authors such as Rod Hunt, Jo Nadin, Jamie Smart, Jeanne Willis, Nick Ward and Elen Caldecott. She has also been the Royal Literary Fund Writing Fellow at the University of Buckingham, giving writing tutorials to university students on a 1-to-1 basis. Teresa loves visiting schools, libraries and festivals to inspire children to write their own stories. Her books have been translated into 15 languages, and her first picture book, Very Little Red Riding Hood, won the Oxfordshire Book Award and the Coventry Inspiration Book Award. Find Teresa on Twitter here: @theapy
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Fay Sampson

Fay Sampson is the author of over 50 books, including novels for children and adults and non-fiction. She has been shortlisted for the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize three times, with Pangur Ban, Chris and the Dragon, and A Free Man on Sunday, and has won the Barco de Vapor award and the CRT Fiction Book of the Year. She has been editing manuscripts for nearly 20 years, and has taught creative writing and been a Writer in Residence. You can find more information about Fay here: https://faysampson.co.uk/
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Victoria Lee

Victoria’s career spans both writing and publishing. Her career began as a secretary in the children’s books department at Hodder and Stoughton. She moved to Methuen, which merged with Heinemann as part of Reed Elsevier. She became an editor, eventually specialising in picture books. She went freelance in 2000 and has since been involved in all sorts of writing projects. Victoria’s wide experience of writing and editing includes children’s picture books through to teen fiction, education and teachers’ books, academic writing, and general fiction and non-fiction. She has worked for publishing houses, universities and individuals. She advises and mentors authors, sometimes over many years. She has been with Jericho Writers since it formed as the Writers’ Workshop. Children’s books, especially picture books, remain her passion. Even though her editing background is in traditional publishing, Victoria is very interested in the self-publishing route as it provides opportunities to ‘do things differently’. She is also keen on writing for the pure joy of it.
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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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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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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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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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Eleanor Hawken

Eleanor is an author and experienced fiction editor. Eleanor has had nine novels for children published under her own name. Her titles include Sammy Feral’s Diaries of Weird (winner of the Lancashire Library’s Fantastic Book Award 2014), Felix Frost (Quercus Books), The Blue Lady and The Grey Girl (Hot Key Books). Eleanor has also written under the pseudonym Zed Storm, devising writing and working as a series consultant on the Will Solvit books. She has also written Book of the Film novelisations for movie studios, and countless activity and story books for various Disney films and franchises in her days as an editor in licensed publishing. She loves discovering fresh talent and working with new authors to hone their story-telling skills. Find Eleanor on X here: @ehawken
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Pippa Goodhart

Pippa Goodhart is the author of over 140 picture books, early readers, and MG novels. Pippa began her children’s book career as a bookseller and advisor to publishers, working with top children’s book editors. She worked for Oxford University Press on novels by Jacqueline Wilson, Tim Bowler, Helena Pielichaty and Geraldine McCaughrean. For the last quarter century, Pippa has combined writing her own books with teaching and critiquing to develop writing for children skills in others. As an author her best known books include the You Choose picture books, illustrated by Nick Sharratt, with sales well over a million copies, and awards from York Libraries and Mumsnet. The well-known Winnie the Witch storybooks are all written by Pippa under the name of ‘Laura Owen’. Pippa has had novels shortlisted for the Kathleen Fidler Award, the Smarties Prize, and The Young Telegraph Book of the Year. New novel, The Great Sea Dragon Discovery, has won the Young Quills Award for best children’s historical novel, 2019. Through Jericho Writers Pippa has worked with writers such as Pip Jones and Catherine Emmett. Find Pippa on Twitter here: @pippagoodhart
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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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Tanya Byrne

Tanya Byrne is an award-winning author of four contemporary YA novels (Hodder), the first of which earned her a nomination for New Writer of the Year at the National Book Awards. Her books have been published around the world and have been translated into Spanish, German, Italian and Polish. She has also contributed to several short story anthologies, including A Change is Gonna Come, which won the YA Book Prize and was the Sunday Times Children’s Book of the Week. She also contributed to Floored, a collaborative novel with Sara Barnard, Holly Bourne, Non Pratt, Melinda Salisbury, Lisa Williamson and Eleanor Wood, which published in 2018. Her agent is Claire Wilson at Rogers, Coleridge & White. A regular at festivals like YALC, Hay and the Edinburgh Festival, Tanya is passionate about diversity in publishing and encouraging writers from marginalised backgrounds to tell their stories. Find Tanya on Twitter here: @tanyabyrne
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