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The girl from Leam Lane: the life and writing of Catherine Cookson

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The first biography of Catherine Cookson to be written with her co-operation. Dudgeon tells the story of the ninety year old authoress through the heroines of her books - all of whom reflect some part of her personality, and particularly her harsh early life in Newcastle.

248 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 1997

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Piers Dudgeon

51 books31 followers

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5 stars
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21 (31%)
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13 (19%)
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6 (8%)
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Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews
Profile Image for The Devine Ms Em.
490 reviews2 followers
February 8, 2014
A dissection rather than an enjoyable story of the life of Catherine Cookson
Profile Image for Kelly Burke.
67 reviews
December 13, 2025
My Mum introduced me to the world of Catherine Cookson when I was a teenager, and I felt the need to dip back into that world this week.
This book explores the author's life, which can make for an emotional read, especially if you are a fan and familiar with Catherine Cookson.
Profile Image for Viktorija.
Author 7 books21 followers
January 1, 2015
I spent most of my teens insatiably devouring anything by Catherine Cookson that I managed to lay my hands on. There was a certain something I felt, some inexplicable force at work that irresistibly drew me towards these stories and rendered them apart from everything else I'd ever read. This book had the effect of a jigsaw puzzle finally falling into place, answering all my questions and unveiling the mystery, larger than life, of Mrs. Cookson's poetics.
Drawing parallels between her own existence as a person and an artist, and that of big literary names such as Dickens and D.H. Lawrence, and, as she herself put it, "transposing her character into the characters in her books" beautifully in order to illuminate points of particular interest, this book simply joins the dots in a wonderful way, and paints a marvellous picture of the metamorphosis of the Girl from Leam Lane into a name lovingly issued from the lips of thousands of thankful fans.
Complete with stunning photographs of "wor Kate" throughout the years, this biography brings the magnetic, radiant person that she was to life as convincingly as she does her own characters.
Profile Image for Lea.
176 reviews
October 15, 2025
Although the start of the book about Catherine’s early years was interesting, the writer focuses mainly on adding summaries of her novels throughout telling her story. I would have preferred to read more about Catherine’s actual life, rather than the blurbs of books. It has motivated me to read her autobiographies though. The author clearly admires Catherine, and so I find it quite surprising that I came away from this book quite disliking Catherine, something which I thought wouldn’t be the case as I find her authorship inspiring.
Profile Image for Helen Geng.
804 reviews6 followers
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October 25, 2020
Read October 2020

A bit of a slog; & I wasn’t convinced by the author’s argument about Cookson’s motivation.
Mostly, I read this to mine for more insanely readable Cookson page-turner titles & to learn more about Mrs. Cookson’s life & history.
102 reviews
May 30, 2017
Interesting social history but hard going if you haven't read her books - which I haven't! I read it for the social history aspect.
675 reviews1 follower
February 15, 2024
I found this less engaging than Cookson's autobiographies. Dudgeon actually interviewed the author, who also recorded information for him to use. There is interesting information here, but he repeats much of what Cookson wrote before. He mixed that with scenarios from her novels to explain her life.
Displaying 1 - 7 of 7 reviews

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