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Rosie Thomas

Janey King, née Morris was born on 1947 in Denbigh, Wales, and also grew up in North Wales. She read English at Oxford, and after a spell in journalism and publishing began writing fiction after the birth of her first child. Published since 1982 as Rosie Thomas, she has written fourteen best-selling novels, deal with the common themes of love and loss. She is one of only a few authors to have won twice the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists' Association, in 1985 with Sunrise, and in 2007 with Iris and Ruby.

Janey is an adventurer and once she was established as a writer and her children were grown, she discovered a love of travelling and mountaineering. She has climbed in the Alps and the Himalayas, competed in the Peking to Paris car rally, spent time on a tiny Bulgarian research station in Antarctica and travelled the silk road through Asia. She currently lives in London.


“Christmas works like glue, it keeps us all sticking together.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Got to go on, haven't we? Life goes on.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Death preserves an ideal.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Anything that makes it easier to understand, makes it a little easier to bear.”
Rosie Thomas
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“The future offers everything. Reach out and take whatever you want.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Love. The wide sea that one word conjures up, all the currents and tides and storms and oily swells of it.”
Rosie Thomas
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“I will continue my path, but I will keep a memory always.”
Rosie Thomas
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“The richness of the whole world reduced to a choice that was not a choice at all, but a sentence.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Let her be with her memories. Better that than be aware of this reality.”
Rosie Thomas
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“I am afraid of losing what I have already valued.”
Rosie Thomas
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“When you're young, everything carries a twin charge of novelty and infinite possibility”
Rosie Thomas
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“Wherever you look there is so much loss and folly to contemplate.”
Rosie Thomas
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“I've grieved enough for his life cut short and for mine for running on for so long with so little in it. It's weakness now, but I suppose I am crying out of a general sense of loss. Maybe I am mourning for the human condition.”
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“Death, when it's right there it doesn't seem too huge and terrible to let into your mind.”
Rosie Thomas
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“The dead were just the dead, neither awful nor remarkable. History separated out these individuals and preserved their names where others were obilterated for ever.”
Rosie Thomas
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“They had lived and known glory, and then they were ddead. She was alive and they were not, and nothing but a heartbeat separated her from them”
Rosie Thomas
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“The dead do not harm us, only the alive.”
Rosie Thomas
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“The dead and not-yet dead, we are company all together.”
Rosie Thomas
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“Learning is important. It is a way to make a life better for yourself and your family.”
Rosie Thomas
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“It's the fragment of your past that explains why you have lived your life the way you have done and made the mistakes that you have made”
Rosie Thomas
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“Like so many plain cups on the shelves. You can reach for them, use them without thinking. Most of them don't matter. Sometimes you lose your grip on one of them and it falls and smashes to piece, and you shrug and say to yourself, what a pity. Then you reach for the cup that you use every day, one that you love and use so often that as you stretch out your hand it is already making the shape that fits its curve. You are certain that yesterday it was in its proper place, but now there is nothing. Just air. You have lost something that was so familiar, so much a part of your life that you were not even looking for it. Just expecting it to be there, as always.”
Rosie Thomas
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“I can only strive for what is important”
Rosie Thomas
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“I need them and they need me to need them”
Rosie Thomas
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“Things don't matter, people do”
Rosie Thomas
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“Try to capture what you can't bear to be without”
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“Some things I can never forget. I must not. Otherwise what do I have left?”
Rosie Thomas
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“As well as remembering too little, I have seen too much”
Rosie Thomas
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“I am afraid of reduction. After a lifetime's independence- yes, selfish independence- I am terrified of being reduced to childhood once more, to helplessness, to seas of confusion from which the cruel lucid intervals poke up like rock shoals. I don't want to sit in my chair and be fed, much less do I want to be handed over to medical professionals.”
Rosie Thomas
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“I am not afraid of death, which after all can't be far away. What does frighten me, though, is the halfway stage.”
Rosie Thomas
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“She had an English boyfriend who called her more often than she needed to hear from him, a savings account, a mobile phone, an Oyster Card, and a place to live that made her feel as if she was in a movie. She was a London girl.”
Rosie Thomas
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