Yorkshire Post

WRITING HER OWN FUTURE

The lone parent of five chasing a writing career

- Email: chris.burn@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @chrisburn_post

JUGGLING THE responsibi­lities of being a lone parent to five children, running a household, working and paying the bills would leave most people with little time or inclinatio­n for writing in their limited amount of spare time, but for author Julie Noble her creative passion is something that can’t be ignored.

“I met somebody recently who said they could only write when they don’t have anything else to do,” she says. “But I feel like I can’t not write.

“In the evening when most people are chilling out, I do my writing then. Usually paying the bills and running the house is first and writing takes place in the gaps, the times when the kids have gone to bed and when it is nice and peaceful.”

When inspiratio­n strikes, Noble says she has even been known to shut herself in the bathroom and start scribbling in her notebook.

Noble, who lives in Fylingthor­pe, near Whitby, but grew up in Leeds, has done everything from childmindi­ng, working for a bank, bookkeepin­g, running children’s activity clubs and even appearing as an extra on shows like Emmerdale and Heartbeat in her profession­al life but has now moved a major step closer to her lifelong dream of becoming a full-time writer after her work was chosen for a prestigiou­s new anthology celebratin­g working-class writers.

She is among three writers put forward by the New Writing North organisati­on to have been selected to have their work published in the

Common People collection, which will also feature contributi­ons from wellknown authors like Malorie Blackman, Damian Barr and Stuart Maconie when it is published in May next year.

Noble, whose children are now aged between 10 and 28 with the youngest two still at home, is among 17 emerging writers from the UK whose work has been selected for Common People from hundreds of entries. “It was incredibly hard to carve out any time for writing as there was so much to do at home,” she says. “This new opportunit­y is giving me more of a chance to focus on my work.”

Noble’s lifelong love of literature began when she was a child growing up in the Leeds suburb of Chapel Allerton close to its border with Chapeltown. Her father’s family was originally from the Fylingdale­s area but he moved to Leeds for work, getting a job on buses while her mother worked in pharmacies.

She says her passion for both reading and writing started at an early age, writing her first story about a lion called Chanto at the age of eight.

“If I hadn’t had books, I don’t know where I would be,” she says. “It was an escape from everything; I might never see something but I could read about it. I went to the library most days after school and I used to read everything, history books, adventure books, The Famous Five.

“If it hadn’t been for Chapel Allerton library, I wouldn’t have had hardly anything. It is still there and my mum still goes.”

She says it was not until she got to A-levels that she was encouraged to apply for university and she ended up getting offered a place to study Psychology and Literature at Lancaster University. Noble says she found the former subject fascinatin­g, particular­ly in relation to the way people’s choices are influenced by the society they grow up in and the people around them.

But in her final year of study at the age of 20, Noble became pregnant and gave birth to her first child a fortnight before her final exams. Despite the new arrival, she graduated with honours but says her life went off in a different direction to many of her peers from university.

“You are instantly cut off from all the people who are planning careers and future study and where they are going to live afterwards. At that time, there weren’t so many options for childcare.”

She ended up living in Castleford with her then-partner and after moving to Ossett two and a half years later, got a job working for First Direct bank in Leeds.

While life has not always been simple after four more children and twice going through divorce, Noble never lost her passion for writing and her own experience­s have acted as an inspiratio­n for her work.

In 2004, she published her first novel Talli’s Secret, a book for older children which tells the story of a girl who survives a car accident that kills her sister and meets the ghost of Charlotte Brontë while visiting Brontë Parsonage. The main character in the book, Cassie, has dyspraxia – a condition which affects physical co-ordination and in real life also affected Maria Brontë, the eldest sister of Brontë family who died at 11, and Jonathon, Noble’s eldest son.

Noble says one of her main motivation­s in writing the story was to raise awareness about what her son, who also has dyslexia, was going through after he struggled to get understand­ing at school.

“My son was having terrible difficulti­es. I wanted to raise awareness and get people talking about it,” she says.

“It made it better for him at school. Sometimes teachers would think he was just messing about.”

She says one of the most moving things to come out of writing the book, which was a finalist in the first Brit Writers Awards and won the David St John Thomas Self-Publishing Marketing Award in 2005, was the letters and emails she received from children in a similar position to her son. “I had a lot of children getting in touch saying this is exactly what it is like and thank you. It was so sweet.”

Noble had further success in 2010 when her story Sands in Time won the

She Magazine Short Story Competitio­n. Her main source of work currently is bookkeepin­g for businesses in the Whitby area and Noble says despite her successes, she is all too aware of how hard it is to make a living from writing if you do not come from a privileged background.

“It is hard to support a family by writing and you have to do other things to make ends meet,” she says. “It is not a career you can go into with confidence.”

She says she hopes the exposure that will come out of being included in the anthology will give her further opportunit­ies to pursue her many ideas, which include three novels, dozens of short stories and a concept for a television show.

“There is lots of work I haven’t had the opportunit­y to put out,” she says.

“Even though there are times I think I might just give up on the dream then something happens like I win a writing competitio­n.”

Noble says her writing style combines social realism with what she thinks is most important – a gripping plot. Now aged 48, she hopes the new opportunit­y provided by Common

People will help provide her own happy ending by allowing her to become a writer on a full-time basis.

“That is my complete dream,” she says.

It is hard to support a family by writing when you have to make ends meet. But I can’t not write. Even though there are times I think I might just give up on the dream, then something happens. Julie Noble, Yorkshire author.

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 ??  ?? AUTHOR OF HER OWN SUCCESS: Julie Noble, whose first book Talli’s Secret was published in 2004, will feature in the Common People anthology. PICTURES: RICHARD PONTER.
AUTHOR OF HER OWN SUCCESS: Julie Noble, whose first book Talli’s Secret was published in 2004, will feature in the Common People anthology. PICTURES: RICHARD PONTER.
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