Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | the-express.com | Chiara Fiorillo |Charlotte Heathcote

    Yet, supporters of Diana may argue that Harry serves as the true steward of her genuine heritage. "There's something about Diana that encourages people to read whatever they want to read into her. The way people can look at Diana as embodying totally differing sides of an argument even applies to her sons," adds Edward. The author is convinced that, had she been alive, Diana would have brought William and Harry together to settle their differences.

  • 2 weeks ago | ok.co.uk | Charlotte Heathcote

    Davinia Taylor, 47, shares her rejuvenating journey from feeling perpetually run-down to discovering a newfound zest for life. "Bearing in mind I hadn't drunk for five years, I felt hungover, sluggish, I had no self-esteem and no get-up-and-go," she recounts. "Life was like walking through quicksand." Switching up her lifestyle and diet had an astonishing effect on the former Hollyoaks star's health, fuelling her drive to write two books, It's Not A Diet in 2021 and Hack Your Hormones in 2023.

  • 2 months ago | mirror.co.uk | Charlotte Heathcote

    'At my darkest moments I wanted to rip my own face off - but now I've found inner peace' Before she became the 'Queen of Manifesting' Roxie Nafousi was tormented by self-hatred - then she discovered a series of simple self-esteem-boosting tricks which she is sharing in her new book Confidence Though the concept of manifesting is centuries old, it didn’t hit the mainstream until 2022 when Roxie Nafousi wrote Manifest, her seven-step guide to making our goals and dreams a reality through...

  • 2 months ago | mirror.co.uk | Charlotte Heathcote |Luisa Metcalfe

    Anna’s world shifted on its axis when her mother died of lung cancer in October 2020. “My mum was such a force and such a power,” says Anna, 43, who lives in London. “It was a horrible kind of violence watching her die for three years. You’re watching the body break down. But she found an unexpected outlet for her overwhelming grief – boxing.

  • 2 months ago | express.co.uk | Charlotte Heathcote

    Anna Whitwham threw herself into boxing to cope with her mother's death (Image: Supplied)When Anna Whitwham lost her beloved mother to cancer, she found an unexpected outlet for her overwhelming grief – boxing. Though her bouts in the ring led to numerous nasty injuries, from a bruised kidney to a dislodged jaw, Anna’s love of boxing became all consuming, and her new-found community even became “the mother I can’t have”.

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Charlotte Heathcote
Charlotte Heathcote @CharlHeathcote
14 Jul 24

RT @PenAHay: Never more urgent Jeanette Winterson ❤️ https://t.co/WQ2H0L0PH1

Charlotte Heathcote
Charlotte Heathcote @CharlHeathcote
4 Apr 24

RT @Aiannucci: Creative Industries make up 6% of our economy: more than car and oil industries together. They employ 2.3million people. To…

Charlotte Heathcote
Charlotte Heathcote @CharlHeathcote
15 Nov 23

RT @LissaKEvans: My girls, adopted from foster care, arrived with few possessions, apart from a box of books they'd each been given by @Boo…