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Grace Wynne-Jones Bio

Grace Wynne-Jones is the author of four highly intimate, heartfelt, humorous and poignant novels that have received critical acclaim and an enthusiastic response from many readers. She has frequently been praised for the warm belly-laugh humour and tender observations in her writing and has been described as ‘a novelist who tells the truth about the human heart’.She likes her books to feel like friends. Two of them have got into the bestsellers charts and, as an article in The Sunday Independent said, they are often about ‘older women looking for fulfillment and, yes love, in a complicated world’.

Ordinary Miracles, Wise Follies, Ready Or Not? (which was described as ‘one of the best Irish novels this year’ when it was first published) and The Truth Club are now available from Accent Press. The new editions were all published this year. Details about the books and sample chapters are available on on this website.

Grace was born and brought up in Ireland and her early years were spent in a big rambling rectory in the Irish countryside. Her father was a Church of Ireland clergyman and, since there weren’t many Protestants in the area, he sometimes played LPs featuring hymns sung by the choir of St. Martin in the Fields in the local church. Passers by who did not know about the recordings must have been amazed by the choral grandeur…given that there were usually just a few cars and the odd bicycle outside the church during the services. She has a great love of the countryside. Her first big love was a pony called Merrylegs.

Grace wrote her first book when she was about eleven. It was called ‘Stories For Everyone’ and she described it in a recent newspaper article:

‘A self-published work with a print run of one copy, it featured a woman, a horse and a puppy on the cardboard cover, and the singer John Paul Jones on the back. It contained two stories. One was about my pony Merrylegs and another was about the joys of nature, so it didn’t quite live up to its title. But Mum and Dad liked it. Encouragement is invaluable to a budding author…Though I still adore ponies and nature these days I have extended my subject-matter. For example women’s lives fascinate me. And writing about them helps me to make sense of my own experiences. What’s more, I make all sorts of new friends as I type the chapters. Characters sometimes just seem to turn up, and I greet them hoping that they will share their hopes and disappointments, their fears and dreams and perplexities. I love intimacy in ordinary life…people who seem to understand. People I don’t have to pretend with. And that’s what the characters in my novels ask of my friendship with them. They want to take off their masks and tell it how it truly is. Sometimes male characters do this too and I almost fall in love with them. For example I find Charlie in ‘Ordinary Miracles’ deeply fanciable. And Nathaniel in ‘The Truth Club’ would make a most wonderful confidant.

‘One of my biggest pleasures is when a reader says they have felt understood by a novel. This is often because a character has admitted to feelings they themselves have never been able to share. For example a number of readers of ‘Ordinary Miracles’ told me they felt I had somehow been spying on their marriages. One person even described the book as: ‘Victoria Wood meets Shirley Valentine’. Jasmine, the main character, has just turned forty and reads books like ‘No Need To Panic: Courageous Acts Of Change In Women’s Lives’. She discovers that her husband has been having an affair, but long before that she was wondering what had happened to her dreams. She confides in her daughter’s teddy and has torrid fantasies about a famous actor. Desperation eventually sends her on a quirky journey of self-discovery and there are tears and epiphanies and adventures and, importantly, laughter. I love writing humour. I like my novels to contain many notes and contrasts, like in music. But as the saying goes, certain chords always reach the heart in the same way.’

Grace has also lived in Africa, the US and England. Her feature articles have appeared in many magazines and national papers in Ireland and in England, and her radio play Ebb Tide was broadcast on RTE 1. Her short stories have been published in magazines in Ireland, England and Australia, and have also been broadcast on RTE and BBC Radio 4. She recently produced and presented a radio documentary about the land, legends and legacy of the Hill of Tara which was broadcast on Newstalk in Ireland.

She has a deep interest in psychology, spirituality and healing and she also loves to celebrate the strangeness and wonders of ordinary life and love.

8 Responses to “Grace Wynne-Jones Bio”

  1. on 15 Nov 2006 at 8:04 pm Norbert

    Hi,

    I’m from Germany. “Some” years ago I met an Irish girl in Greece. She had just written her first article for a newspaper. Could it have been you?

  2. on 08 May 2007 at 5:36 pm William Sherwood

    Grace, did u ever live in Ballyorgan, Co, Limerick, as i knew a Rev. Wynne-Jones there, as i was born in Kilfinane, Co Limerick in 1925. Best Wishes with your books. Bill Sherwood

  3. on 09 May 2007 at 10:41 am Grace

    > Dear Bill,

    Lovely to hear from you! Yes, I did live in the old Rectory in Ballyorgan and Rev. Wynne-Jones was my lovely Dad. What a beautiful place it is. I remember very fondly trips to the local mountains that are covered in beautiful forests. We sometimes had picnics there. And as a little girl I loved that the small shop in the village sold marshmallow mice! After
    Ballyorgan we moved to the Rectory in Knockainey, another lovely rural place in County Limerick. I used to find dear Dad’s sermons very
    entertaining. THANKS so much for your email.

    Warmest wishes,
    Grace

  4. on 17 May 2007 at 12:41 pm Pete Smith

    Hello Grace
    I knew you as a very small girl whose father took over Kilflynn parish after my grandfather died.
    Canon Manning had been there since 1919!!

  5. on 17 May 2007 at 2:54 pm Grace

    Dear Pete,

    How very nice of you to email. Yes, I was a very small girl when Dad moved to Ballyorgan Rectory and the Kilfinane Parish. The rectory was lovely. Big and rambling. There was plenty of space for Mum’s many dogs too!

    Warmest wishes,
    Grace

  6. on 01 Jan 2008 at 11:02 am brian strange

    Grace, I have come across an old letter from the Rectory at Ballyorgan to the Bishop of Limerick, dated Oct 25 1926. It concerns the sale of an old violin to the Bishop by WRT Manning on behalf of a poor parishioner. I was intrigued by it and can send you a transcript as I thought it told a lovely story and was intrigued to find out the characters involved. I have mailed the Diocese of Limerick but I realise now that Rev Manning was probably Anglican rather than Catholic

  7. on 22 Jan 2008 at 12:15 pm Johanna lowry

    Hi Grace
    Have been trying to contact you. How’s about a coffee if you’re in town?
    Cheers
    Johanna

  8. on 24 Feb 2008 at 1:18 pm Grace

    Dear Brian,

    Thanks so much for sending me a copy of that letter. It’s lovely! What a lovely little true tale! I hope that Dorothy enjoyed her violin. It sounds very special.

    Warm wishes and many thanks,

    Grace

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