Isabel Ashdown lives in West Sussex with her carpenter husband and two children. The middle child of an artist and an English lecturer, Isabel was born in London in 1970 and grew up in a seaside village on the south coast of England, a place which continues to fuel much of her writing. After fifteen years working in product marketing, Isabel made the decision to give up her job in senior management to write, enrolling for a degree in English and Creative Writing at the University of Chichester, where her late father had taught two decades earlier. In 2007, she graduated with first class honours and was awarded the Hugo Donnelly Prize for outstanding academic achievement, going on to receive an MA with distinction in 2010.
Her first novel Glasshopper (Observer ‘Best Débuts of 2009’, Evening Standard ‘Best Books of the Year’) was published to critical acclaim in 2009. An extract from the novel won the Mail on Sunday Novel Competition and was described by judges Fay Weldon, Michael Ridpath and Sir John Mortimer as 'magnificent'. Her second novel Hurry Up and Wait has just been released.
Isabel Ashdown recently launched The Chichester Book Club - a new website dedicated to introducing local readers to books and authors in their region.
'My Saturday Job - When I was 14 I took a job in a chemist in the West Sussex seaside village of East Wittering, where I lived. The owner was a softly spoken man called Mr Holmes who had an entirely female staff, many of whom had worked for him for decades.'
Isabel Ashdown remembers her first job working at a West Sussex Chemist in The Guardian.

'My dad's love affair with alcohol' - Read Isabel's moving article in Red magazine about how her father's addiction has shaped her life.
'When I was 21, I walked into my local bookshop and asked the woman behind the counter if they could find a particular book for me. There was no internet shopping back then, and, as it was a specialist book, it would need to be ordered. I felt ashamed asking for it, and had to repeat the title several times before the assistant located it in her trade journal. ‘Ah, yes!’ she finally declared, loudly. ‘Here it is! Adult Children Of Alcoholics!’ She looked up at me, delighted, and I wanted to die on the spot.'

Isabel is a supporter of NACOA, the National Association for Children of Alcoholics.
Isabel says, 'Alcoholism in the family is one of society’s best kept secrets. In families where alcohol is a problem, children are often deeply affected by the guilt of this secret, of not understanding why their parent drinks or how to help them get better. It can be a lonely place. But thanks to Nacoa, today’s children have someone they can to talk to without fear of exposure, and sometimes that’s all a child needs to help them through it. I’m proud to be a supporter of Nacoa’s vital work.'
'I remember my own teenage years with great clarity. From around the age of fourteen, I pretty much felt I knew my own mind, and started to leave behind the things of childhood...My interests had shifted: I wanted to read about bigger things than my parents chose for me – I was after free-thinking and books with adult themes.'
Read Isabel's guest post on popular YA fiction blog Mostly Reading YA as she discusses her growing popularity amongst adolescent readers.