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Helena Pielichaty
Author of the new Girls FC series of books. Click on Helena’s photo to go to her own web site.
Girls FC is a series of books based around the younger teams at Lincoln Griffins. Over the past few years Helena has attended training sessions and followed matches played by the Griffins 07/08 U11 and then 08/09 U12 teams to get ideas for her new series of books.
We are proud to have been of help to Helena in her endeavours and hope you all like the books and if you are not playing football already that these will inspire you to get into the game!
Try the Girls F.C. Quiz, just click on the books...
As a child
Helena was born in Stockholm to an English mother and a Polish-Russian father. She came to live in England when she was five. Her earliest childhood memory is of diving under a hedge in terror when an aeroplane flew low over the garden. That and picking scabs off her knees.
As an adult
Helena’s main career before writing was as a teacher, although her first Saturday job was selling fruit and vegetables on Pontefract market for which she was paid – wait for it – a pound a day! During her teacher training, Helena vividly remembers the lecturer talking about how to read out loud to a class and then demonstrating by reading an extract from The Midnight Fox by Betsy Byers. The reading almost sent her into a trance; she was so engrossed. From then on, her mission was to try to instil the same sense of awe and wonder in the children she read to, putting on many diabolically bad accents along the way. Reading to and alongside her classes remained the best part of the school day as far as she was concerned but once the National Curriculum was introduced and the class reader was squeezed out, the magic disappeared. Her favourite read-out-loud books at the time were Run for your Life by David Lean, The Machine Gunners by Robert Westall and later, Anne Fine’s Diary of a Killer Cat.
As an artist
Helena never planned to be a writer but the seeds were sown as a teacher. As well as reading other people’s stories out loud she wrote short plays and customised worksheets for her pupils. This created a nagging restlessness in her that she couldn’t fathom until she took maternity leave and moved to Nottinghamshire. In 1987, needing a diversion from discussing the merits of disposable nappies with other new mums, she enrolled on a creative writing course run by the WEA. The course, held in a leaky Scout and Guide Hut only lasted for six weeks but she describes it as ‘…like turning on a tap… one that I couldn’t turn off again.’ The very first short story she wrote ‘The Bogs’ became the third book she had published. It has been re-titled The Saturday Girl and is still in print.
Latest News...
Training goes back to Ravendale from first Thursday in August
Wanted!
We need more U10's ASAP to help form a new U10 team... if you are going to be in Year 4 or 5 in the new school year and want to play football then ask your parents to contact us.