Rachel Cooke
(born 1969–70) is a British
journalist and writer.
Early life
Cooke was born in Sheffield,
and is the daughter of a university lecturer.
She went to school in Jaffa,
Israel, until she was 11, before returning to Sheffield, and attended Oxford
University.
Career
Cooke began her career as a reporter for The Sunday Times. She has also written
for the New Statesman, where she is
television critic and is a writer for The
Observer newspaper. In the 'Lost
Booker Prize' for 1970, announced in March 2010, Cooke was one of the three
judges. Since 2010, Cooke has been
reviewing graphic novels for The
Guardian's "Graphic novel of the month".
Cooke's first book, Her
Brilliant Career: Ten Extraordinary Women of the Fifties, was published in
autumn 2013. The writer's first book, Katharine Whitehorn wrote in The Observer that "this excellent book should go far towards setting the record
straight" about women's increasing experience of having professional
careers rather than being confined to a life as a housewife as accounts of the
1950s commonly assume. Amanda Craig wrote in The Independent that Cooke's "writing does not delve deep but is
eloquent, concise, fair-minded, witty and elegant."
Awards
In 2006 she was named Interviewer
of the Year at the British Press
Awards and Feature Writer of the Year
at the What the Papers Say Awards. In 2010 she was named Writer of the Year at the PPA
Awards for her interviews in Esquire.
Personal life
Cooke is married to the film critic and novelist, Anthony Quinn, and lives in Stamford Hill, London.
Bibliography
Cooke, Rachel
(2014). Her brilliant career: ten
extraordinary women of the fifties. London: Virago Press. ISBN
9781844087419.
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