

She has been the recipient of numerous awards including the Golden Leaf, the Award of Excellence, the National Readers Choice, and a two Career Achievement awards from Romantic Times. She regularly appears on bestseller lists including the USA Today overall bestseller list, the New York Times, and and the Publishers Weekly list. In 1988, it sold to Walker, and was published as "Lord Wraybourne's Betrothed". The same year, she completed a regency romance, but it was promptly rejected by a number of publishers, and she settled more earnestly to learning the craft.

Moved to Ottawa, in 1985 she became a founding member of the Ottawa Romance Writers’ Association, that her “nurturing community” for the next twelve years. When her professional qualifications proved not to be usable in the Canadian labour market, she raised their two sons and started to write her first romances. In 1976, her scientist husband was invited to do post-doctoral research at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

She quickly attained a position as a youth employment officer until 1976, working first in Newcastle-under-Lyme, Staffordshire, and then in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire.

After graduation, they married on June 24, 1971. From 1966 to 1970, she obtained a degree in English history from Keele University in Staffordshire, where she met her future husband, Ken Beverley. At sixteen, she wrote her first romance, with a medieval setting, completed in installments in an exercise book. At the age of eleven she went to an all-girls boarding school, Layton Hill Convent, Blackpool. Mary Josephine Dunn was born 22 September 1947 in Lancashire, England, UK. It seemed an ideal arrangement in which she had nothing to fear.unless it was losing her heart to this most enigmatic earl! Why would an earl, and a most attractive one at that, have any interest in marrying an impoverished widow with two children? It was a peculiar notion to consider but the opportunity to better her family's fortune, particularly in the advent of the approaching holiday season prompted her to accept his offer. It was an odd sort of marriage proposal which left Judith perplexed. All he wanted was a marriage of convenience, but soon he began to wonder whether his eminently practical mind would be overruled by his surprisingly foolish heart. Her figure was most attractive, her manner most pleasing, and her heart kind and gentle. But his search for an intelligent woman without fanciful notions of romance was a frustrating one indeed.until he met the very sensible Judith Rossiter. It was time he settled down in his family home with a wife at his side and enjoyed a proper English Christmas. Leander Knollis, Earl of Charrington, was tired of gadding about the Continent on diplomatic missions.
