Rosie Rushton
Rosie Rushton | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1946 (age 79–80) United Kingdom |
| Occupation | Writer |
| Subject | Fiction |
Rosie Rushton (born 1946) is a British author[1] who wrote several novels for teenagers.[2]
Rushton is a researcher and music facilitator based in the West Midlands, where she has established herself as a specialist in music provision for individuals with learning disabilities.[3]
Rushton began her career as a feature writer for the local paper. Staying Cool, Surviving School was her first book, published by Piccadilly Press in 1993. After writing another non-fiction title, You’re My Best Friend, I Hate You!, Rosie turned to fiction.[4]
Selected works
[edit | edit source]The Leehampton series
[edit | edit source]- Just Don't Make a Scene, Mum! (1995)
- I Think I'll Just Curl Up and Die! (1995)
- How Could You Do This To Me, Mum? (1996)
- Where Do We Go From Here?/Does Anyone Ever Listen? (1999)
The Girls
[edit | edit source]- Poppy (1996)
- Olivia (1997)
- Sophie (1998)
- Melissa (1998)
- Jessica (2000)
Best Friends
[edit | edit source]- Best Friends Together (1998)
- Best Friends Getting Sorted (1999)
- Best Friends in Love (1999)
What a Week
[edit | edit source]- What a Week Omnibus Books 1-3:
- What a Week to Fall in Love (1998)
- What a Week to Make it Big (1998)
- What a Week to Break Free (1998)
- What a Week Omnibus Books 4-6:
- What a Week to Make a Stand (1999)
- What a Week to Play It Cool (1999)
- What a Week to Make a Move (2001)
- What a Week to Take a Chance (2004)
- What a Week to Get Real (2005)
- What a Week to Risk it All (2006)
21st century Austen
[edit | edit source]- The Secrets of Love (2005)
- Summer of Secrets (2007)
- Secret Schemes and Daring Dreams (2008)
- Love, Lies and Lizzie (2009)
- Echoes of Love (2010)
- Whatever Love Is (2012)
Other books
[edit | edit source]- Staying Cool, Surviving School (1993)
- You're My Best Friend - I Hate You! (1994)
- Fab 5: Don't Make a Scene, Mum (1999)[5]
- Life Line (1999)
- PS He’s Mine (2000)
- Break Point (2001)
- Tell Me I’m OK, really (2001)
- Last Seen Wearing Trainers (2002)
- All Change! (2000)
- Fall Out! (2002)
- Waving Not Drowning (2003)
- Friends, Enemies and Other Tiny Problems (2004)[6]
- The Dashwood Sisters’ Secrets of Love (2005)[7][8]
- The Greatest Love Story Ever Told (2013, Kevin Mayhew). The gospel retold for teenagers.[9]
References
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External links
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- Piccadilly Press Ltd. official site
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