Sneha Girap (Editor)

Catrin Collier

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Full Name
  
Karen Jones

Website
  
catrincollier.co.uk

Nationality
  
Welsh

Name
  
Catrin Collier

Occupation
  
Novelist

Role
  
Novelist

Agent
  
Marjacq Scripts


Catrin Collier dgrassetscomauthors1364893838p538502jpg

Born
  
1948
Pontypridd, Wales

Other names
  
Karen Watkins Katherine John K. A. John Katherine Hardy Caro French

Books
  
Swansea girls, Hearts of Gold, Broken Rainbows, Tiger Bay Blues, By Any Name

Hearts of gold series by catrin collier


Karen Watkins (née Jones, born 1948), writing as Catrin Collier, is a Welsh novelist, of East Prussian descent on her mother's side, known for her historical works, especially those in the 'Hearts of Gold' series, set in her home town of Pontypridd between 1930 and 1950, the first of which was adapted as a BBC drama in 2003. She also writes under the pen names Katherine John/ K. A. John (crime novels), Katherine Hardy (novelisations of television programmes) and Caro French (modern fiction).

Contents

As well as novels, she writes short stories, plays and non-fiction, and has had work published in magazines including published in Woman, Woman’s Own and Woman’s Weekly.

She is a member of Swansea Writers' Group, which encouraged her from the outset of her career before she had published a novel.

Ty Catrin, an adult education centre in Pontypridd, was named in her honour in 2002. She is represented by the literary agency Marjacq Scripts.

Hearts of gold series by catrin collier


Early life

Her mother, Gerda Salewski, was born in Allenstein, East Prussia, in 1926. Her father, Glyn Jones was a Welsh Guardsman serving in Germany when he met Gerda. They married in Pontypridd in July 1947. Collier was born there in 1948 and grew up in the town.

Her book One last Summer is based on war-time diaries kept by her mother and maternal grandmother. and is recommended by the Holocaust Memorial Day Trust for young people wanting to learn about the Holocaust . It was a 2008 finalist for the Romantic Novelists' Association’s Book of the Year.

As a comprehensive school teacher, she taught English and drama to A level in schools in Swansea and West Glamorgan.

After living in Germany and America, Collier now lives on the Gower Peninsula, near Swansea.

Television

In 2003, Hearts of Gold was adapted by BBC Wales as a two-part drama, directed by Richard Laxton and co-written by Matthew Baylis. BBC Wales' head of drama Matthew Robinson described her as "the Catherine Cookson of Wales".

References

Catrin Collier Wikipedia