Reviews
Goodwin is a born author – Wigan Evening Post
Harrowing and compelling, Forsaken is a believable, gut wrenching and ultimately uplifting tale of triumph over tragedy. – World Books
The New Catherine Cookson - The Coventry Evening Telegraph.
Sincerity, warmth and the all too rare skills of a true storyteller shine through Rosie Goodwin’s writing, and in No One’s Girl she engages us with characters that we are immediately rooting for. Rosie’s the real thing – a writer who has something to say and knows how to say it. - Gilda O’Neil
Fans of Jo Cox have a kindred spirit in Rosie Goodwin. Dancing Till Midnight exercises your emotions – and leaves them glowing. - World Books
A good tearjerker…compelling. - Reading Evening Post
A lovely story of two women finding their way in life – very enjoyable…it’s a page-turner. - Yours
Brilliant! A real tissue-box tale, heartrending. - Daily Echo, Bournemouth.
One to make you laugh and cry. - Our Time, Cambridge
Rosie Goodwin is a born storyteller – she’ll make you cry, she’ll make you laugh. But most of all you’ll care for her characters and lose yourself in her story. - Jeannie Johnson
The tearjerker of the season…a heartrending tale. - Western Mail
Goodwin is a fabulous writer… She reels the reader in surprisingly quickly and her style involves lots of twists and turns that are in no way predictable. - Worcester Evening News
Rosie deserves all her success. She is a talented storyteller and will go all the way to the top. - Dee Williams
A story of adversity and survival. - Huddersfield Daily Examiner
The Bad Apple marks out Rosie Goodwin as a major writing talent. - World Books
A heart-throbber of a story from Goodwin that puts many other so-called emotional blockbusters in the shade. A foster carer herself and a former social worker, she knows the nitty-gritty of life in which relationships are a patchwork of joy and sorrow, understanding and hostility. - Moonlight and Ashes – The Northern Echo
A gifted writer. Tells a cracking story and does so with an insight into people that is rarely found. Not only is Goodwin’s characterisation and dialogue compelling, but her descriptive writing is a joy. At the risk of offending an army of Cookson fans, I think Goodwin will more than fill the late great saga queen’s shoes. - Nottingham Evening Post



