• ©
  • John Johnson

Helen Walsh

Born:
  • Warrington
Publishers:

Biography

Helen Walsh was born in Warrington in 1977.

Her first novel, Brass, was published in 2004 and was as much a love letter to her hometown of Liverpool as it was a coming of age story. She wrote it from her mother’s kitchen table while coming off mood stabilisers. Brass won a 2005 Betty Trask Award and is being adapted for the screen. Her second novel, Once Upon a Time In England (2008), the story of the Fitzgerald family - Irish Robbie and his Malaysian wife, Susheela and their two children - won a 2009 Somerset Maugham Award and was shortlisted for the 2008 Portico Prize. It is being adapted for both theatre and television. Her recent books include Go To Sleep (2011), inspired by her experiences of motherhood, and The Lemon Grove (2015). She lives in the Wirral.

Critical perspective

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Bibliography

The Lemon Grove
Go To Sleep
Paint a Vulgar Picture: Fiction Inspired by the Smiths
Once Upon a Time in England
Perverted by Language: Fiction Inspired by the Fall
Brass

Awards

2009
Somerset Maugham Award
2008
Portico Prize
2005
Betty Trask Award

Author statement

When I was a child I used to make sense of the world through reading. Now I make sense of it through writing. I write almost every day in some capacity. Becoming a mother has made me if not a better writer, then a more mature one. It’s not that I’m more disciplined or that I value my time at my desk more - on the contrary, I’m more relaxed about the whole business of novel writing. If I’m not burning to tell a story then I’m not going to write it just for the sake of writing or having another book out. Those in-between-pulling-teeth novels are usually executed in short story form now, or shelved for posterity.