Helen Brown (author) explained

Birth Name:Helen Blackman
Birth Place:New Plymouth, New Zealand
Occupation:Writer
Language:English
Nationality:New Zealand
Children:4

Helen Brown (née Blackman; born 1954) is a New Zealand-born author, best known for her memoirs about cats and the meaning of life. A Multi-award winning journalist and columnist, she has written 15 books, including her memoir "Cleo", a New York Times and UK Sunday Times bestseller that has been published in more than 18 languages in 73 countries, and sold 2 million copies around the world.

Personal life

Brown was born in 1954 in New Plymouth. She studied journalism at Wellington Polytechnic. At age 18 she flew to England to marry her first husband, Steve, whom she had met three years prior. They returned to New Zealand and had two sons, Sam and Rob. Sam was hit by a car and killed on 21 January 1983, aged 9. Soon after, her family adopted a kitten, about which she wrote her best-selling book Cleo.[1] The book is about a small black cat who helped mend a family's broken hearts. Cleo lived to be 23 years old. Brown had one more child, Lydia, with her first husband before they divorced.[2] [3]

Brown married her second husband, Philip Gentry, in 1991. Together they had one daughter, Katharine. They moved to Melbourne in 1997 and have lived there since. Brown underwent a mastectomy after being diagnosed with breast cancer. During recovery, her sister suggested she get another cat. She adopted a Siamese cat and named him Jonah, after Jonah Lomu the famous rugby player. Jonah became the subject of her next book, After Cleo.[4]

When Brown fostered a rescue cat, Bono, in New York, her Huffington Post blog about finding a home for him had more than 26 million readers. Her book Bono, The Amazing Story of a Rescue Who Inspired a Community was translated into several languages.

She has since published a version of Cleo for younger readers, Cleo and Rob, illustrated by Phoebe Morris. Her next book will be Mickey, The Cat Who Raised Me.

Awards

Works

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Helen Brown. www.goodreads.com. 20 May 2018.
  2. Web site: Taranaki Story – Helen Brown Comes Back . Bartle . Rhonda . . 12 May 2005.
  3. Web site: About Helen . Brown . Helen.
  4. Web site: Hello kitty: The cat that saved Kiwi author Helen Brown. 22 May 2012. The New Zealand Herald.
  5. Web site: When a child loses a brother or sister, we have to help them grieve . 29 September 2019 . Sunday Star Times . Stuff.co.nz . Helen . Brown.