For more than twenty years Denise Robertson has appeared on television alongside the likes of Richard and Judy, Fern Britton and Phillip Schofield, Paul O'Grady and John Culshaw, working with Princess Diana and even nightclubbing in Chicago with Jerry Springer. George Michael has called her a diamond. Newspapers have hailed her common sense.
Privy to the confidences of the hundreds and thousands of people who write to her, confessing secrets and asking for advice about every conceivable problem, few realise that Denise's own life has been a roller-coaster ride. A turbulent childhood saw her father lose his business and the family turned out on the street. Widowed twice, she has lost the roof over her head, been threatened by a psychopath, experienced a breakdown, and suffered such financial privation that at times she did not know how to feed her children. Despite all this, she has never allowed life to get the better of her and has always somehow always managed to turn tragedy into triumph.
Known to millions as the agony aunt from ITV's "This Morning" programme, Denise Robertson works extensively on television and radio, and as a journalist with several newspaper and magazine columns. Her website deardenise.com receives thousands of hits every week. She is also a successful popular novelist, the most recent of which include "Wait for the Day" and "A Relative Freedom", published by Little Books. Denise lives in northeast England with her husband and an assortment of dogs.
Privy to the confidences of the hundreds and thousands of people who write to her, confessing secrets and asking for advice about every conceivable problem, few realise that Denise's own life has been a roller-coaster ride. A turbulent childhood saw her father lose his business and the family turned out on the street. Widowed twice, she has lost the roof over her head, been threatened by a psychopath, experienced a breakdown, and suffered such financial privation that at times she did not know how to feed her children. Despite all this, she has never allowed life to get the better of her and has always somehow always managed to turn tragedy into triumph.
Known to millions as the agony aunt from ITV's "This Morning" programme, Denise Robertson works extensively on television and radio, and as a journalist with several newspaper and magazine columns. Her website deardenise.com receives thousands of hits every week. She is also a successful popular novelist, the most recent of which include "Wait for the Day" and "A Relative Freedom", published by Little Books. Denise lives in northeast England with her husband and an assortment of dogs.
Used availability for Denise Robertson's Agony? Don't Get Me Started ..