Huddersfield Daily Examiner

We didn’t have a proper Christmas – we didn’t expect it

-

parents were hard-working – her father was a road sweeper and her mother worked in a cotton mill – yet she has revealed her dad was also a drinker.

“My dad was a wonderful man – funny, interestin­g, he worked very hard. But when he got his wages on a Friday, paid by the foreman in the pub, the money went over the counter,” she has said.

Her parents divorced when Josephine was 15. She recalls that her mother simply upped and left one day, taking eight of the children with her and leaving two of her brothers in Blackburn with her father. While she says her stories are not based on her own life, they’re often full of emotion.

She eventually moved south with some of her siblings to live with an aunt, and was a teenager of 16 when she met and married Ken, in 1957.

Her early experience­s of hardships, love and family have no doubt given her plenty of material for her family sagas, the latest of which, A Family Secret, centres on a woman who has a child from an affair with her friend’s husband, but keeps the child a secret from those she cares about most. Not wanting to continue living a lie, the repercussi­ons of her actions reverberat­e through the family.

“When I’m writing, I like to think about families and the difficulti­es they have.

“When I was growing up in Blackburn, I used to sit for hours on the doorstep watching their lives, and that’s where my stories come from.

“When the characters have problems, either the problem destroys them or makes them stronger. That’s the same in life.”

Today, more than 20 million of her books have been sold and Josephine is in a much more comfortabl­e setting, living near her sons and two grandchild­ren in Buckingham­shire, but says she still doesn’t go mad with money at Christmas.

“I’m not extravagan­t. We just pay the bills, get the groceries, feed the cat, look after the house. My husband and I made sure that when our children were growing up, they did have lovely Christmase­s. I love Christmas now. As we didn’t have a Christmas tree in those days, I now always have a big tree with lots of lights on, and presents.”

She doesn’t go mad on presents though. “I have a sense of reason. I listen through the year to hear what the grandchild­ren might like for Christmas. I’m very discreet.

“My family aren’t grabby and greedy. I usually spend around £40 on something, but if they want something particular, I might spend a bit more. I don’t have any things I particular­ly want for Christmas. When you’ve grown up with nothing, you don’t expect anything.”

She has been widowed for 13 years after a blissful 57-year marriage to Ken, and misses him to this day.

“I try to keep Christmas the same but I miss Ken terribly, not just at Christmas, all the time. I fill the void by doing what I do, writing stories and doing whatever I can with the family.

“You could say I live on my own but the house is always full!” she adds. “People are in and out. It’s like a bus stop. It’s lovely, but if Ken was there it would be right. He was the love of my life.”

She says she takes a break from writing over the festive season, but will be back at it in the New Year, having already created the characters for her next book.

“I put a pen and paper profile of each character on my office wall, and I can hear them shouting, ‘Come on, what about us?”’ Josephine reveals. “So I have to get in there and crack on with

it.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom