Meet the Authors
Patricia Aspinall | Jania Barrell | Alan Battersby | Frank Brennan | Colin Campbell | Penny Hancock | Jeremy Harmer | David A Hill | Margaret Johnson | George Kershaw | Sue Leather | Mandy Loader | Richard MacAndrew | Alan Maley | Janet McGiffin | Antoinette Moses | Helen Naylor | J.M.Newsome | Rod Nielsen | Philip Prowse | Sarah Scott-Malden | Bernard Smith | Brian Tomlinson | Carolyn Walker | Judith Wilson
Patricia Aspinall

Patricia Aspinall has a first degree in Education and an M.Phil in Linguistics from the University of Cambridge. After teaching English as a Foreign Language in schools and Colleges of Further Education, she joined UCLES (University of Cambridge Local Examinations Syndicate) where she was responsible for running and developing EFL examinations including PET, FCE, CAE, and CPE. She is now a freelance author and language consultant and has written numerous books and other materials on language development. She specialises in books that prepare students for examinations such as the Certificate in Advanced English and the Business English Certificates.
Cambridge English Readers
Alan Battersby
Alan Battersby taught for two years in Italy, then for fifteen years at the Studio School of English, and took a particular interest in materials writing. He then took a year off to complete the Luton MA in Second Language Materials Development. During the course, he decided to go freelance and he now divides his time between writing and part-time teaching. He is currently working at Bishop's Stortford College, UK.
He is interested in the whole area of materials development and is the secretary of the Materials Development Association which organises regular conferences on aspects of materials development. His particular interests include vocabulary development, the speaking skill, creative writing and creative grammar and examination practice.
Cambridge English Readers
Frank Brennan

Frank Brennan comes from the North West of England and is a graduate of the University of Wales. He has worked as an actor and writer in a theatre group for schools before going on to teach English and Drama in secondary schools both in the UK and in Singapore.
He has edited books of short stories and plays; written literature guide books for secondary students; published collections of original short stories and plays and is currently working on another collection of short stories.
His interests include music, especially jazz and roots music, and history.
Cambridge English Readers
- Circle Games
- Tales of the Supernatural:
Finalist: The Language Learner Literature Award 2005 - The Fruitcake Special and Other Stories
- Three Tomorrows
- Windows of the Mind
Colin Campbell

Colin Campbell has worked in English teaching for almost 30 years. He has been a teacher, teacher-trainer and consultant in a number of countries, including Poland, Spain, Italy, Ireland and England. He has also been involved in setting up language schools in Italy and Poland. Some of his favourite memories from his career are: co-hosting a Learning English television series for local television in Italy; recording Irish songs for a Children's coursebook in Poland; writing original readers for Cambridge University Press and, still, teaching students anywhere.
In addition to teaching, training and writing, Colin Campbell does voluntary counselling work in London.
Cambridge English Readers
Penny Hancock

Penny Hancock has English teaching experience in Italy, Greece, Morocco and the UK. She also teaches in Primary schools and has run courses in creative writing for adults.
Her Readers for Cambridge University Press address issues such as adoption, bereavement and prejudice within the romantic genre. Within High Fences was a finalist for the Extensive Reading Foundation award. Penny lives and works in Cambridge and has three children.
Cambridge English Readers
- A Love for Life
- Just Good Friends
- Love in the Lakes New!
- Within High Fences:
Finalist: The Language Learner Literature Award 2006
Jeremy Harmer

Jeremy Harmer is currently a course tutor and designer for the online MATESOL at the New School, New York, but he has taught extensively in both the UK and in Mexico, where he worked for many years.
As both a coursebook writer and the author of key titles on EFL teaching methodology, Jeremy is a frequently invited speaker at conferences and seminars all over the world. When not teaching, writing or travelling, his interests include listening to and playing music (he plays piano, guitar and viola with more passion, perhaps, than skill), and this obsession with music is reflected in his two readers for Cambridge University Press.
Cambridge English Readers
David A Hill

David A Hill trained and worked as a primary school teacher in the UK before moving into ELT; he has an M.Phil in Applied Linguistics from Exeter University. David has taught EFL full time in Italy and Serbia, and worked for the British Council for 18 years, 12 of which as the Council's state sector teacher trainer for Northern Italy. Since 1998 he has worked out of Budapest as a freelance consultant, travelling annually to around 10 different countries for work with students, teachers, teachers' associations, ministries and the British Council. He has worked for IATEFL since 1988, holding various posts in the Association, and is currently the Coordinator of the Literature, Media and Cultural Studies SIG. His main interests within ELT are the teaching of young learners and teenagers, materials development, literature in language teaching and teacher training. David spends half of his year writing educational materials.
Outside the ELT world David is a published poet and translator of poetry and a naturalist who has written many articles for professional journals on ornithology and botany. He plays guitar, piano, harmonica and sings in a gigging blues band, and is also a performer of traditional English folk song. He is an expert on Art Nouveau architecture and design, and is especially fond of William Morris.
Cambridge English Readers
Other Cambridge University Press publications
- Turning the Corner (Cambridge Collections)
- The Alphabet Book (Cambridge Middle East)
Margaret Johnson

Margaret Johnson is a writer, artist and teacher who lives in Norwich, Norfolk with her partner and their young son. She is a graduate of the renowned Creative Writing MA at the University of East Anglia and has written plays, screenplays and children's fiction as well as six Cambridge English Readers. Whatever she writes, Margaret likes to try to include some humour and says, 'the biggest thrill of all is making people laugh.'
Cambridge English Readers
- All I Want
- Different Worlds
- In the House Coming soon!
- Jungle Love
- Murder Maker
- Next Door to Love
- Wild Country New!
Sue Leather

Sue Leather is an ELT consultant and writer with over 25 years of experience in the field. She has a background as a teacher, teacher trainer and school manager. Sue now runs her own consultancy group and has educational projects all over the world.
In addition to her consultancy and training work, Sue is a writer and editor of learner fiction.
Cambridge English Readers
- Bad Love
- Dead Cold
Winner: The Language Learner Literature Award 2005 - Death in the Dojo
- Dirty Money
- Hotel Casanova
- Just Like a Movie
- The Amsterdam Connection
- The Big Picture
- The Way Home
Richard MacAndrew

Richard MacAndrew has worked in ELT for over 30 years. He has taught in Finland, Sweden, Malaysia and Great Britain. He has been a freelance writer since 1996, writing a number of readers for the Cambridge English Readers series, as well as a variety of books for other British and American EFL publishers.
His interests, other than writing, include walking in the Yorkshire Dales, listening to the music of Jerry Garcia, reading numerous detective stories and thrillers, and watching Scotland play rugby – preferably in his favourite city, Edinburgh.
Cambridge English Readers
- A Death in Oxford
- A Puzzle for Logan
- Blood Diamonds
- Inspector Logan
- Logan's Choice
- Strong Medicine
Finalist: The Language Learner Literature Award 2007 - The Black Pearls Coming soon!
- The Lahti File
- The Penang File
- The University Murders
Alan Maley

Alan Maley has been in the field of TESL for over 40 years. After being at the University of Leeds under Peter Strevens in the early 1960s, he worked as an English Language Officer with the British Council for over 25 years. His career took him to places as diverse as Yugoslavia, Ghana, Italy, France, P.R. China and India.
He left the Council in 1988 to take over as Director-General of the Bell Educational Trust in Cambridge, where he stayed for 5 years. Between 1988 and 1992 he was the Chair of IATEFL and was very active in promoting links with other teachers' associations worldwide, especially in Central Europe. In 1993 he took up a position as Senior Fellow in the Department of English Language and Literature at the National University of Singapore, where he stayed for 5 years.
He subsequently set up and directed the Master's programme in ELT at Assumption University Bangkok. (1999–2004).
He currently divides his time between work asVisiting Professor at Leeds Metropolitan University, writing, short-term teaching assignments, mainly in SE Asia, and freelance consultancy work. He has been active in the field of publishing for many years, especially in the area of resource books for teachers. At present he is working on a study of the phenomena of repetition and reformulation in language teaching.
Cambridge English Readers
Other Cambridge University Press publications
- Drama Techniques in Language Learning (with Alan Duff, Cambridge Handbooks for Language Teachers)
Janet McGiffin
Janet McGiffin lives in Athens, Greece. She writes mystery novels, travel articles and grant proposals for small non-profit organizations (NGO) based around the Mediterranean. Currently she is public-education publicist for a 12-country European Union cultural grant involving conservation of ancient artifacts made of gold, silver, or copper.
Cambridge English Readers
- Emergency Murder
- Murder by Art Coming soon!
Antoinette Moses

Antoinette Moses is a writer and playwright. Her plays have won several competitions and have been produced or received rehearsed readings in Norwich, Cambridge, Ipswich, London and Paris. Her books range from media studies and poetry to a guidebook to Athens, where she lived for four years. Antoinette teaches creative writing at the University of East Anglia where she is working on a PhD on verbatim (documentary) theatre. She has also worked as an editor, journalist, film festival director and for music and poetry festivals. Two of her Cambridge English Readers have won awards from the Extensive Reading Foundation: Let Me Out and Jojo's Story, which has been described by one reviewer as 'one of the most important books of all time'.
Cambridge English Readers
- Apollo's Gold
- Dolphin Music
- Frozen Pizza and Other Slices of Life
- John Doe
- Jojo's Story
Winner: The Language Learner Literature Award 2004 - Let Me Out
Winner: The Language Learner Literature Award 2007 - The Girl at the Window
Helen Naylor

Helen Naylor has taught English to adults for over 30 years in language schools in the UK. Currently, she's working as a freelance writer and has published books on grammar and Cambridge exam preparation. She also works as a writer and examiner for Cambridge ESOL on many different papers.
When she's not working, Helen's interests include playing tennis, skiing, being by the sea and food – cooking it and eating it.
Cambridge English Readers
J.M.Newsome

Julia Newsome is now a writer. After taking a BA in Drama at Manchester University, Julia taught EFL in Athens for 22 years. She wrote and commissioned teaching materials for local schools and later joined Heinemann as a commissioning editor. She took the RSA TEFLA at the British Council there. Since leaving Greece in 1995 she has been a freelance translator, editor, publisher and materials writer for Penguin and Longman among others, and has continued examining and teaching EFL. She has lived and worked in Belgium, Yugoslavia and Zimbabwe, and now concentrates on writing fiction and scripts.
Her other interests include travel, exploring Cumbria (where she now lives) and rural Greece, and volunteering at Shakespeare's Globe.
Cambridge English Readers
- Nelson's Dream New!
Philip Prowse

Philip's interest in reading began in Egypt in the early 1970s when as a British Council Officer he developed materials to support class readers. His British Council career also took him to Portugal, Greece and Poland. Returning to the UK at the start of the 1980s he became Principal of a large residential language school and teacher training college in the UK, leaving in the early 1990s to become a freelance trainer and materials writer.
Throughout his career he has written teaching materials including major primary, secondary and adult courses, as well as a number of highly-successful readers. He has run training courses and spoken at conferences in Europe, Africa, Asia and South America. Philip is also Reviews Editor of the English Language Teaching Journal.
Cambridge English Readers:
Other Cambridge University Press Publications:
- Activate your English (with Barbara Sinclair)
Sarah Scott-Malden

Sarah Scott-Malden studied French and Italian at Bristol University before moving to Italy for three years where she had her first teaching jobs in Pisa and Florence.
She took the RSA Diploma in TEFL and then took up a teaching post with the Bell School of Languages, at first in Norwich and then in Saffron Walden. She taught at the Saffron Walden school for eleven years before moving with her family to California. While with the Bell School, Sarah worked as a teacher and a teacher trainer.
Cambridge English Readers
Bernard Smith
Bernard Smith has been a teacher and writer for 40 years, specialising for the last 30 in EFL. He has worked in South Yemen, Libya and Oman, teaching Arabic and English and writing teaching books and materials. He was Director of Studies of several ARELS schools in the UK, and was also Controller and principal author of the Oxford-ARELS oral examinations for twenty challenging and enjoyable years. After retiring from teaching, he continues to write EFL books on a freelance basis.
Cambridge English Readers
Other Cambridge University Press publications
- Learner English (editor, with Michael Swan)
Brian Tomlinson
Brian Tomlinson has a BA from the University of Liverpool, a PGCE in ESL from the University of London, an MA in ESL from The University of Bangor and a PhD from the University of Nottingham.
He is Reader in Language Learning and Teaching in The Centre for Language Study at Leeds Metropolitan University, where he is Head of Research and runs an MA in Materials Development for Language Teaching. Previously he was a Senior Fellow at the National University of Singapore, where he was the Chair of a number of MA modules and Coordinator for Language Research. He has also worked as a teacher trainer or curriculum developer in Nigeria, Zambia, Vanuatu, Indonesia, Japan and the UK, and he was Course Manager of the MA in L2 Materials Development at the University of Luton. He is also President of MATSDA, the international materials development association which he founded in 1993.
He has given presentations to teachers in over forty countries and he has published numerous articles and books.
His interests are in materials development for language teaching, language awareness, language through literature and the development of reading skills. He is researching the potential roles of visualisation and inner speech in the acquisition of a foreign language and he has published a number of articles on these topics.
Cambridge English Readers
Other Cambridge University Press publications
Carloyn Walker
Carolyn Walker started teaching O and A Level English in 1973 and has taught EFL since 1975. She has an RSH Dip (1977) and an MA in Applied Linguistics (York University 1981). She has worked in Spain and UAE as an EFL teacher. Teacher training includes British Council Summer Schools in Exeter, Swansea, Manchester, and overseas in Algeria, Pakistan, Bulgaria, Austria, and Czechoslovakia.
Cambridge English Readers
Judith Wilson
Judith Wilson has been an English teacher all her life. She worked abroad for many years – in France, northern Zambia and Saudi Arabia. She spent six months travelling in West Africa after leaving Zambia, and has also travelled in the Middle and Far East as well as America and New Zealand. Since 1987 she's been back in England, working at the Bell School in Saffron Walden, near Cambridge. She also writes for UCLES examinations.