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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

Where Shadows Meet
Patrice Caldwell’s Where Shadows Meet — the first in a duology — is a thrilling feast of vampiric fiction for romantasy fans.    Here, the author has conjured a rich world occupied by glamorously iconic characters — from a princess of the Heavenly Realms who wears a dress fashioned from sunlight, and a goddess who her sacrificed her wings for the girl she loved, to a vampiric princess who needs human blood to survive, and a show-stopping seeress — to weave a story of love and loss, devotion and betrayal, the awakening of ancient evil, and an ... View Full Review
Nettle
Timeless and poetic, Nettle’s haunting magic is cast with the kind of wand that will also captivate readers who are impatient for action, for Nettle isn’t only lusciously lyrical — it’s driven by a race-against-time quest that sees its marvellous protagonist compelled to complete three seemingly impossible tasks. Bravo to Bex Hogan for crafting a sublime story of faery magic, love and courage that will cast a hex on many a reader.   “Once there was a girl called Nettle. She was all things wild with a sting to ... View Full Review
Overland
Following three young travellers who board a beaten-up Land Rover (Vera) to follow the hippy trail from London to Kathmandu in 1970, Yasmin Cordery Khan’s Overland weaves an utterly compelling, fresh-perspective story of old money privilege, the confidence and optimism of youth, and British imperial arrogance.  For context, as Khan shares in her Author’s Note, it’s estimated that from the 1950s to the late 70s, over one million people “made the journey from London to India by bus, van, or simply by hitch-hiking”, with the trail coming to an end with the ... View Full Review
Black Friday
By turns philosophical and speculative, cautionary and mysterious, Cheryl S. Ntumy’s Black Friday is a boundary-flexing, imagination-stretching short story anthology that shifts between posing existential questions, and addressing themes of power and agency, to a more playful magic realism mode. The mighty titular story thrusts readers into a throng of rioters who reside in a dystopian Protectorate “fighting for Justice and Equitable Distribution and the Rights of the People and the Sanctity of the Land.” As for the context, “Black Friday is a big day across the Protectorate… a rioter can’t stay ... View Full Review
The Sleeper
Opening in late 17th-century, and interweaving the fascinating centuries-old story of a poor French silversmith with the discoveries of a present-day woman, Rica Hene’s The Sleeper is an elegantly written delight. Also rich in period detail, and shrouded in mystery, it seamlessly blends well-informed historic fiction with all the pace and readability of contemporary fiction. The story begins in France, in 1685, when a young, impoverished silversmith by the name of Abraham ventures to England in the hope of finding his fortune. A fortuitous encounter sees him journey to Kingston-Upon-Hull, as a result of a stranger sharing a yet ... View Full Review
Art Deco Scotland
Contextualised through tracing Art Deco history, from when the term was coined by Le Corbusier on the occasion of the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Decoratifs et Industries Modernes in Paris, Bruce Peter’s Art Deco Scotland is endlessly informative, and often surprising, in that it showcases the remarkable richness of Scotland’s arguably unlikely Art Deco heritage. As Peter notes in his introduction, “With a northerly maritime climate, Scotland may have seemed an unlikely place for large numbers of buildings and instances of design and visual culture exhibiting elements reflective of the sunny south and of smart ... View Full Review
Where Are the Women?
“The way we memorialise our history is key. As George Orwell noted in 1984 ‘He who controls the past, controls the future. He who controls the present, controls the past.’ He.” So Sara Sheridan shares in her introduction to Where Are the Women? — a tremendously enlightening alternative guidebook that imagines a landscape in which “women are commemorated in statues and streets and buildings - even in the hills and valleys”. Noting that her home city of Edinburgh has more statues of animals than women (!!!), Sheridan has painstakingly put women on the Scottish map, quite ... View Full Review
Chinese Parents Don't Say I Love You
Beautifully written, lean and nourishing, Candice Chung’s Chinese Parents Don't Say I Love You is an astute, moving and often amusing memoir that does a profoundly affecting dive into how rituals around family dining are used as a vehicle for expressing what we really want to say, and how we really feel: “A meal is a shape. It is a container into which we pour our cravings.” Distant from her Cantonese parents, when food journalist Candice finds herself single after a decade in a relationship with a man they never met, she invites her parents to ... View Full Review
Electric Life
First in a trilogy (huzzah!), Rachel Delahaye’s Electric Life deserves to be held up as a paragon of YA dystopian fiction. Fronted by a character to root for — a young woman whose every decision, dilemma, danger, doubt and desire cuts to the core of what it means to feel alive — it’s set in future versions of London that feel freakily familiar.   Alara lives in Estrella, the hyper-sanitised “Star City” in which everything is digitally monitored, and everything is safe. A place in which no one can be ... View Full Review
Bitter Honey
“Don’t let a man obstruct you. I let a man stop me from becoming who I was meant to be”. Words of wisdom and experience from Nancy, the elder of the mother-daughter pair whose stories are explored in Lolá Ákínmádé’s brilliantly compelling Bitter Honey. “But it’s never too late to reclaim your life,” Tina, the daughter, counters. And therein lies two of the main themes threaded through this novel as it spans four decades and three continents through the two women. In 1978, Nancy ... View Full Review
Flesh
At once direct, understated and emphatic, David Szalay’s Flesh is a brilliantly brutal novel about a young man’s life journey from a terrible incident in his lonely teenage years, through to serving in the army, and drifting through a succession of circumstances that see him rise, in a way, and fall, in a big way, throughout his adult life. “He doesn’t know what it’s like for other people. He only has his own experience.” So the author sums up his protagonist, István, near the start of a remarkable ... View Full Review
Songs for Ghosts
Traversing modern America and Japanese folklore, music, myth and history, Clara Kumagai’s Songs for Ghosts weaves a wondrous story of love, loss and longing. Told through the intertwined narratives of a contemporary Japanese-American teenager and a young Japanese woman’s diary written a century ago, it explores universal themes of heartbreak, identity and displacement with subtle power.   The story begins when Adam finds the diary in the attic of the house he shares with his dad, step-mom and little brother Benny. Sore from being dumped by his boyfriend, Adam can’t draw ... View Full Review