Becoming Emma Charlesworth, Author

Various images of Emma Charlesworth and her book Is Daddy Going to Be OK?

Today is World Book Day. And this one feels a little bit different. Because this is my first World Book Day as the author of Is Daddy Going to Be OK? Since I’ve been able to hold a book in my hands and say I wrote this.

For many years, I was one of those mums that came to dread World Book Day. It simply meant finding a costume for my daughter (my brilliant parrot umbrella for Mary Poppins was quite something). Books and reading were always something that I actively encouraged as she was growing up. Language and storytelling were something that I knew the importance of, but they belonged to others. Not me.

I didn’t grow up aspiring to write a book. I didn’t have plans to become an author. Writing was never something I pursued with any sense of ambition or expectation. I didn’t write. It just wasn’t something that I thought was good at. Every year at our annual performance review at work, I’d say that writing was a skill I needed to develop. I didn’t write in greetings cards, leaving that to my late husband. Yet here I am. An author. And the journey to get here has been a heck of a rollercoaster (no pun intended).

When I started writing my blog in 2021, I didn’t start it because I had a plan. I started it because my social media posts had become insanely long. Family and friends suggested a blog would be a good idea and may help others. It was a natural progression. When my husband fell ill in March 2020, I quickly took to social media to share our story and to get support. Because under the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions, virtual support was all I could get. Sharing our story and writing became a lifeline for me. It helped me feel less isolated by knowing that there were people out there thinking of us. Willing my husband to get better. The social media posts I wrote four weeks later when he died, were some of the hardest posts I’d ever written. How do you share that your husband has died at the age of 45 of a virus that up until a few months previously no-one had ever heard of?

As the days turned into months, my writing helped me as I tried to adjust to our new world. As I learnt how to put one foot in front of the other as a young widow and solo parent. As I tried to make sense of the senseless. As I captured moments, thoughts and feelings that shone a light into the world of bereavement and grief. What I didn’t realise at the time was that writing wasn’t just helping me process what had happened. It was preserving it. It was creating something that would outlast those early days of grief and the immediate aftermath.

Over time, what I viewed as my little ramblings became something more than I had ever expected. People began to read them. To connect with my words. To see themselves in them. Messages would arrive from strangers who understood in ways that others couldn’t. From people who were also navigating loss, or who had followed our story during the pandemic and had never forgotten it.

People told me to write a book. I laughed it off. Where on earth would I find the time to do that? But more than that, writing a book felt too big. Too permanent. Too exposing. Writing a blog post felt safe. It existed in the moment. It reflected where I was at that point in time. But a book felt different. A book would become part of the record. Something that couldn’t be quietly edited or reshaped with the passage of time.

But slowly, writing a book, telling our story, the real story of the pandemic became something I wanted to do. I began to understand why it mattered to me so much. And I was “gently” encouraged to explore the art of the possible, after all, what did I have to lose? So, in March 2024, on the holiday my late husband and I had always planned to do my 40th birthday, I opened my emails and got the final push I needed to turn a hypothetical into a reality. And thus began the concerted effort to write my book.

I didn’t sit down and define an audience. The marketer in me would be quite cross at that. All I simply wanted to do was tell our story in my voice. I didn’t write the book in chronological order; I had to write as memories and thoughts came to me. Putting myself back into 2020 and 2021 was incredibly tough. I’d changed phones and lost all my messages from those early days, so I’d ask my sister “could you send me the group message from X date.” Invariably the response was “where are you? if you’re on the train or at work, don’t read this now.” My commutes became my writing time. Any spare moment tended to turn into writing time. I’d drop my daughter at dancing and then sit in a coffee shop writing. I’d write on the train as I travelled to weekends away. Writing become a second full time job. And I then had an epiphany about what to name each chapter. “To Charlie” was coming to life. The words I ended my speech with at his Memorial Service were the title of the book. It was happening.

But then I hit a wall. I procrastinated over finishing it. And it was only through my life coaching sessions with the wonderful Sheryl Findlay, that I was able to unlock why.

Subconsciously, it felt that this book was my final goodbye to my husband. Everything that had gone before was leading up to this. This book would tell the end of his story and the beginning of my new life as a young widow and a solo parent. To finish this book felt like saying goodbye to him for the last time.

Once I unlocked that, it made the final days of writing easier. It reminded me that his life hadn’t simply ended. His story and his legacy were continuing, just in a different way. It might have been my final goodbye as his wife, but it would mean that he would be immortalised in print forever more. A place in history. As I got ever closer to finishing it, it brought up so many emotions. My last words were written at Peckforton Castle, the place my nan lived when she was evacuated during the Second World War. I was nearby for a Widowed and Young event and it felt like the most apposite place to write. I hadn’t realised when I sat at Peckforton with a coffee just how close I was to finishing it. As I closed my laptop for the last time, the tears came. The tears continued for the whole of my drive home.

A short while later I found myself back in therapy again. I hadn’t prepared myself for what it would do to me by putting myself back in those early stages of grief, finishing the book and coming to a number of realisations about my life. The book which I’d dedicated so much time and effort to simply lived on my laptop. I had to put my mental health first. I had to focus on me and process everything I’d compartmentalised and buried for nearly five years. My brain allowed me to process it better. Time does that. I’d compartmentalised because it was just too damn painful to deal with at the time. Now I had to deal with it to help me move forward.

And then. After about six months or so, the want to do something with To Charlie returned. I contacted agents. At times it felt like I was pitching into an abyss. I had numerous conversations to get advice on publishing a book. And then in April 2025, Softwood Books was recommended to me… the rest is history.

I learnt so much working with the team. I still am. Their patience as I gave them a manuscript with the caveat that I didn’t think I liked the title of the book anymore. Because I felt that people would see it and think it was a letter to my late husband rather than being a toast to him. The noddy questions I asked about publishing a book and all that entailed. The noddy questions I’m still asking of the team! My deliberations and meticulous attention to detail. Is Daddy Going to Be OK? became the new title. The book cover incorporating yellow hearts as they became a symbol for all those lost to COIVD-19. My late husband’s handwriting as part of the logo for Twists of Hope Publishing. So much work in the run up to the release date of 14 November 2025. The day that would forever become the day I became a published author. The day that I knew World Book Day would take on a new meaning for me.

Yet Is Daddy Going to Be OK? isn’t just a book for me. This is my family’s story and a way of creating a legacy for my late husband and daughter. And in some small way, a legacy for everyone whose lives were affected by the pandemic. It was never about writing a book for the sake of it. It was about making sure that our story existed in a form that couldn’t be forgotten. From the day my husband died, I was adamant that he wouldn’t became a statistic of the pandemic. One of the numbers we heard every day on the news. Figures representing loss, but not the people behind them.

My late husband was, and always will be, so much more than that.

He was a father. A husband. A son. A brother. An uncle. A nephew. A cousin. A godfather. A friend. A colleague. He had a life that was full of meaning, humour, kindness and love. He had a future that should have stretched far beyond the age of 45. And our daughter deserves to have something she can hold onto. Something that tells the story not just of how he died, but of how he lived, and how she and I continued afterwards.

I am an author but I’m also still the same person who wrote those waffly social media posts and started a blog. I am still navigating grief in all its complexity. World Book Day this year also falls just a few days before the COVID-19 Day of Reflection, a day dedicated to remembering those who lost their lives during the pandemic and the millions of people whose lives were changed forever.

For many, the pandemic is something that feels increasingly distant. Something that belongs to the past. But for families like mine, its impact is ongoing. This World Book Day, I find myself reflecting not on the book itself, but on the journey that led to it. The unexpected path from survival to legacy.

But above all else, this book exists because my late husband existed. Because he was, and still is, loved. Because he is missed. I wrote a blog nearly three years ago, titled “Who lives, who dies, who tells your story?” Telling his story is something I needed to do. Because it deserves to be told. Our story deserves to be told. He deserves to be remembered. Books and words have a way of outliving us. They’re a legacy. They carry pieces of people forward into the future. They help make sure that even in absence, there is still presence.

This World Book Day, that means everything.


Is Daddy Going to Be OK? is a memoir about grief, widowhood and resilience after losing my husband during the pandemic, and about helping a child navigate loss. The book is available from the below retailers:

Out now: Is Daddy Going to Be OK?

Various photos of Emma Charlesworth at the launch of her debut book Is Daddy Going to Be OK?

Wow. It’s taken me a few days to process what’s happened. 

I am now a published author. I held a book launch for family and friends. My book is on sale worldwide. 

And that’s why, despite being a writer, this is one the shortest blog posts I’ve ever written. Because I still don’t really have the words to explain what this means to me. They’ll come in time, I have no doubt about that. There’s so much I want to share about this whole process. 

But for now. I just want to say thank you to the following: 

  • All at Softwood Books for helping me with my vision and bringing this to life. 
  • Jemma at Click:Create Photography and Design for the beautiful and most perfect cover. 
  • Sheryl Findlay for your guidance, love, and support during our life coaching sessions while I was writing this. 
  • Everyone who has read my blogs, followed our story, and provided that virtual support.
  • Finally. My family, friends, colleagues, and all who have supported me and my daughter since 2020. There are far too many to name individually, but you know who you are.

For anyone who would like to buy a copy of Is Daddy Going to Be OK?, the links to various retailers are below:

The next chapter in my story

An image of the front cover for Is Daddy Going to Be OK? authored by Emma Charlesworth

Five and a half years ago today, on 19 April 2020, my husband died in a global pandemic. 

I write that because when you’re living it, there’s an element that you just survive. You can’t sit and think about it too much because it’s simply too huge. It’s overwhelming. 

When I went to bed on that fateful day, I had no idea what my future held. How I was meant to carry on. How I could raise my daughter without him. I’d never been an adult without him, how was I meant to start at the age of 39? 

A month later, after one of my honest Facebook posts, someone suggested I start writing a blog. I didn’t really know if I could or if I’d have anything to say. But after launching that blog in March 2021, I realised the power of sharing my story. 

Since that day, I’ve been asked countless times if I’m going to write a book. Again. I didn’t really know if I could or if I’d have anything to say. But at my team’s Christmas gathering in 2023, as we went round the group and spoke about what we were hoping to achieve in 2024, I told them I was going to write a book. 

On 22 September 2024, after being away at the Widowed and Young AGM and while having a coffee in the castle my nan spent five years in when she was evacuated in World War II, I wrote the last words of that book. 

I hadn’t quite anticipated what would follow. A return to therapy for me. A realisation of how much I hadn’t processed about my late husband’s death. Another bereavement which knocked me for six. A return to therapy for my daughter. My book felt like the least of my problems. It was written, if it never saw the light of day, did it really matter? 

Except deep down inside, I knew it did matter to me. So. Eventually, I started the process of trying to get it published. I’ve learnt so much this year about just what it takes to get a book published. But for the last few months, I’ve been working intently on making it a reality. And on today’s pertinent date, I’m thrilled, honoured and just a teeny bit scared to reveal more details. 

Is Daddy Going to Be OK? by Emma Charlesworth will be published in November. 

Wow. That statement is almost as sobering as saying my husband died in a global pandemic. 

I’ve done it. I’ve written a book. It’s going to be published. I wonder if I’ll look back in five and a half years and realise that today was the day that I finally took stock of what I’ve achieved? That I’ve spent so long writing, editing and making decisions about it, that I haven’t really reflected on just what it means to have not just written a book, but to have also published one. 

I’m so conscious that this will not be an easy read for so many people. That it might be incredibly painful. As with my thoughts when I launched my blog, I don’t actually know if anyone will read it. But what I do know is that since 19 April 2020, my aim has always been simple. To create a legacy for both my daughter and my late husband to make sure he never becomes a statistic of the pandemic. I hope in some small way, that this book helps me achieve that. 


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