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Joanne Owen - Editorial Expert

Joanne Owen’s lifelong love of reading and writing began when she was growing up in Pembrokeshire, and very much wished that witches (and Mrs Pepperpot) were real. An early passion for culture, story and folklore led Joanne to read archeology and anthropology at St John’s, Cambridge, after which she worked as a bookseller, and led the UK children’s book buying team for a major international retailer. During this time, Joanne also wrote children’s book previews and features for The Bookseller, covering everything from the value of translated fiction, to the contemporary YA market. Joanne later joined Bloomsbury’s marketing department, where she had the pleasure of working on epic Harry Potter launches at Edinburgh Castle and the Natural History Museum, and launching Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book. After enjoyable spells as Marketing Director for Macmillan Children’s Books and Consumer Marketing Manager for Walker Books, Joanne went freelance, primarily working for multi-award-winning independent children’s publisher, Nosy Crow.

Alongside her publishing career, Joanne has written several books for children/young adults. She’s now a fulltime reviewer, workshop presenter and writer, working on YA novels with a strong basis in diverse folklore from around the world, as well as fiction for younger readers (in which witches are very much real).

Latest Features By Joanne Owen

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Latest Reviews By Joanne Owen

The Final Gambit
“This was Hawthorne House. There would always be another mystery…This was the beginning…and I was ready to be bold”. So ended the previous novel in the enigmatic, dripping-with-wealth-and-mystery Inheritance Games series, and The Final Gambit picks up the baton in edge-of-your-seat style. Avery’s year in Hawthorne House has almost come to an end, which means she’s on the verge of fulfilling the condition of Tobias Hawthorne’s inheritance. On the cusp of becoming the richest teenager in the world. Over the past year, she and the handsome Hawthorne bros ... View Full Review
Getting Healthy in Toxic Times
Written by Jenny Goodman — a medical doctor and broadcaster who’s been practising Ecological Medicine for twenty-two years — Getting Healthy in Toxic Times presents a fresh approach to well-being through examining the connections between physical health and environmental pollution and toxins.  “Our health and that of the planet are inextricably linked” — so this illuminating book opens, clearly setting out the driving force of Goodman’s thesis. Speckled with eye-opening case studies, the book is structured by elements, with chapters covering Earth, Water, Air and Fire unpacking the damage being done to our ... View Full Review
Other Names, Other Places
Following a woman’s coming-of-age journey from childhood to her unravelling of pivotal truths about her past as an adult, Ola Mustapha’s Other Names, Other Places possesses all the page-turning pull of a mystery. Nessie’s voice is utterly enthralling — clear, commanding, and laced with tension from the moment we meet her as a child, newly arrived in London from Tunisia, forever feeling that she was neither white enough, nor African enough: “Life had been hard since we moved to England. Hard and exhausting. I was constantly in trouble. People were always angry with ... View Full Review
Honey
Astute, addictive, lemon-sharp and steamy, Isabel Banta’s Honey debut explores a young woman’s navigation of celebrity, sex, relationships and identity through the late 90s and early 2000s. Part coming-of-age novel, part exposé of sexism and double-standards in the music industry and media, it’s devilishly compulsive, and clever with it. “I feel like a fruit swinging from a tree. Plump and flush with color. Waiting to be picked”. So remarks Amber early on in the novel (and her career) in a line that encapsulates the quality of Banta’s writing — ... View Full Review
The Sun Over The Mountains
Written by Suzie Fletcher, master saddler and the big-hearted, highly-skilled leather expert on The Repair Shop, this engaging autobiography is a must-read for anyone who’s ever teared up (or full-on sobbed) during an episode of the show. In Suzie’s words, “I hope my story brings understanding to people going through all kinds of rubbish. Life isn’t easy, but it’s far better when there is empathy and compassion from those around us. The sun over the mountains is there for everyone”. In addition to appealing to fans of the TV series, ... View Full Review
Yours From the Tower
Shortlisted for the YA Book Prize 2024 Set in 1896, Yours From the Tower is a clever, compelling epistolary novel that dances with the magic of female friendship, romance, and thought-provoking presentations of its historic context. Told, in the main, through letters between three young women, this splendid story invites “then and now” comparisons as it reveals how restrictive life was for women in the late nineteenth-century, along with the era’s huge social divides. After leaving boarding school, best friends Tirzah, Sophia and Polly are on the brink of leading disparate adult lives. This comes as ... View Full Review
The Mapmaker's Wife
Moving from the Caribbean island of Grenada in 1954 through to 2015, Hannah Evans’ The Mapmaker's Wife shares a sweeping intergenerational story of love and long-held family secrets.  Exploring interracial marriage and racism, the effects of isolation on a young bride in an often-hostile new environment, and an impossible decision that only comes to light after being buried for decades, it’s very readable and packed with character. Bright young Bea lives on the Caribbean Spice Island of Grenada when her life is turned upside after meeting Patrick, a handsome English-Irish surveyor, at a dance in 1954. There’s ... View Full Review
Mother Sea
Set on “an ocean-speck atoll in Britain’s shrunken empire, far east of the Seychelles”, Lorraine Wilson’s Mother Sea presents a moving, of-the-moment story of an island community under threat from the devastating effects of climate change. Suffused in indigenous island culture against a backdrop of British colonialism, it fizzes with furious conflicts between “old ways” and outside influences through its protagonists’ gripping journeys from tragedy and grief to a new state of hope. Scientist Sisi is immersed in monitoring the conditions that are wreaking devasting change on her remote Indian Ocean ... View Full Review
Something to be Proud Of
Through authentic narratives that alternate between Imogen (“a chaotic, leftist, autistic bisexual who wants to be a stand-up comedian”) and Ollie, the gay captain of the football team, Anna Zoe Quirke’s Something to be Proud Of teems with real-life struggles, the magic of friendship, and the power of coming together to bring about change to be proud of. If that wasn’t enough, it’s also funny and ripples with unexpected will-they-won’t-they? romance. Having “long been aware that I inhabit a world that was built either by or for me”, ... View Full Review
Mind Games
Mind Games, Nora Roberts’ latest page-turner, is driven by a set of vividly-conjured characters across generations and decades. Rippling with the barely-contained undercurrents of family tragedy, and the implications of an inherited psychic gift that feels more like a curse, it’s tremendously suspenseful, and will have fans of the writer’s special brand of thriller on the very edge of their seats. “For Thea, the best part of summer started the second week of June” when her family “started the long drive from Fredericksburg, Virginia, to Redbud Hollow, Kentucky” to see her ... View Full Review
The Venus of Salo
Part of Ben Pastor’s Martin Bora series, The Venus of Salo is sophisticated, characterful and inventively twisty. Striking a brilliant balance between literary verve and lucidity, it’s a must-read for fans of gripping historic crime. It’s October 1944 and Bora is sent to Salò on the shores of Lake Garda to find out how a valuable painting came to be taken from a private residence: “It’s not just a painting…Why, it’s a work by Titian, Herr Oberst. Certified and worth a fortune. A spectacular Venus reclining on ... View Full Review
The Big Ask
One of the notable features of YA novellas published by Barrington Stoke is that they’re pithy page-turners — perfectly-paced, authentically-voiced works of short fiction across all genres that’ll keep even the most reluctant readers keen right to the end. In the case of The Big Ask, it’s all those things, along with being gorgeously romantic in a way that leaves you longing for more. Super-cute, unexpected, authentically funny and heart-flutteringly dreamy, there are so many reasons fans of YA romance should hope Simon James Green’s Barrington Stoke debut is just ... View Full Review