• Hausa Edition
  • Podcast
  • Conferences
  • LeVogue Magazine
  • Business News
  • Print Advert Rates
  • Online Advert Rates
  • Contact Us
Wednesday, October 15, 2025
Leadership Newspapers
Read in Hausa
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
Leadership Newspapers
No Result
View All Result

Author Of ‘A Woman Of Substance’ Dies At 91

by Ruth Nwokwu
11 months ago
in News
Share on WhatsAppShare on FacebookShare on XTelegram

English author, Barbara Taylor Bradford, known for best-selling novels including ‘A Woman of Substance’, has died at the age of 91.

Advertisement

A statement from Taylor Bradford’s representative on Monday said she “died peacefully at her home yesterday (24 November 2024) following a short illness, and was surrounded by loved ones to the very end.”

Paying tribute, her publisher and editor Lynne Drew said, “Dominating the bestseller lists, she broke new ground with her sweeping epic novels spanning generations, novels which were resolutely not romances, and she epitomised the woman of substance she created, particularly with her ruthless work ethic.”

Advertisement

The author was “perennially curious, interested in everyone and extraordinarily driven”, Drew said, and was “an inspiration for millions of readers and countless writers.”

Chief executive of publisher HarperCollins, Charlie Redmayne, said, “Barbara Taylor Bradford was a truly exceptional writer whose first book, the international bestseller A Woman of Substance, changed the lives of so many who read it – and still does to this day.”

She was “a natural storyteller” as well as “a great, great friend,” he added.

RELATED NEWS

Northern Christians Mourn Uma Ukpai, Hail Impact On Evangelism

2 Emirs To Receive Sports Writers Awards

Commission, Group To Restore Hope, Empower Vulnerable People

38 Health Schools Recognised In Katsina — Official

Emma was played by Jenny Seagrove, who paid tribute to the author as a “dear friend”.

Seagrove recalled meeting Taylor Bradford as a young and nervous actress.

“The door opens and all I can say is that a powerhouse of glamour and warmth heads towards me, grabs me, hugs me, and says… ‘You are my Emma Harte’.

“And that was the start of a long friendship with the force of nature that I am proud to call my friend.”

They “talked about everything under the sun”, Seagrove said, adding: “She never changed. Success never diluted her warmth and humour or her ability to relate to everyone she met, whether a cleaner or a princess.

“She never, ever forgot that she was just a girl from Yorkshire that worked hard and made good. RIP dear friend.”

Bradford was born in Leeds, where her mother “force-fed my books”, and young Barbara had her first story published at the age of 10 in a children’s magazine.

She left school at 15 to work as a typist and copytaker on the Yorkshire Evening Post and got her first stories into the newspaper’s pages by surreptitiously slipping them into the sub-editor’s tray.

It took the editors some time to realise what she was doing, but they then promoted her to be a journalist, and she was the paper’s only female reporter at the time.

Her first books were about home design – beginning with the Complete Encyclopaedia of Homemaking Ideas in 1968 – and she wrote a string of entries in the How to be the Perfect Wife series.

Her first foray into fiction, when she was in her mid-40s, brought huge success and broke the mould.

“When I wrote A Woman of Substance I didn’t sit down and think, I’m going to write about a woman warrior who conquers the world and smashes the glass ceiling, but I did want to write about women in a positive way,” she told the Guardian in 2017.

“At the time there were a lot of very sexy books out there but the women didn’t come out of them very well.”

As well as ‘A Woman of Substance’, a number of her other books were turned into TV or film adaptations by her husband, Hollywood producer Robert Bradford. He died in 2019.

Join Our WhatsApp Channel

SendShare10171Tweet6357Share

OTHER NEWS UPDATES

JUST-IN: Renowned Nigerian Global Evangelist Uma Ukpai Dies At 80
News

Northern Christians Mourn Uma Ukpai, Hail Impact On Evangelism

32 seconds ago
SWAN Unveils 60th Anniversary Logo, Launches Celebration Of Sports Journalism Excellence
News

2 Emirs To Receive Sports Writers Awards

7 minutes ago
Commission, Group To Restore Hope, Empower Vulnerable People
News

Commission, Group To Restore Hope, Empower Vulnerable People

13 minutes ago
Advertisement
Leadership join WhatsApp

LATEST UPDATE

Northern Christians Mourn Uma Ukpai, Hail Impact On Evangelism

32 seconds ago

Ahundana Emerges Acting Chair Of Adamawa SDP

5 minutes ago

2 Emirs To Receive Sports Writers Awards

7 minutes ago

Commission, Group To Restore Hope, Empower Vulnerable People

13 minutes ago

38 Health Schools Recognised In Katsina — Official

17 minutes ago
Load More

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sport
    • Football
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Opinion
    • Editorial
    • Columns
  • Others
    • LeVogue Magazine
    • Conferences
    • National Economy
  • Contact Us

© 2025 Leadership Media Group - All Rights Reserved.