Jennifer Worth trained as a nurse at the Royal Berkshire Hospital in Reading. She then moved to London to train as a midwife. She later became a staff nurse at the Royal London Hospital, Whitechapel, and then ward sister and sister at the Elizabeth Garrett Anderson Hospital in Euston. Music had always been her passion, and in 1973 Jennifer left nursing in order to study music intensively, gaining the Licentiate of the London College of Music in 1974 and a Fellowship ten years later. Jennifer married Philip Worth in 1963 and they lived together in Hertfordshire. She died in May 2011, leaving her husband, two daughters and three grandchildren. Her memoirs are the basis for the popular TV series Call the Midwife.
"Jennifer Worth's memories of her years as a midwife were at once
hilarious and tremendously moving." -Ayelet Waldman, author of Love
and Other Impossible Pursuits
"Worth is indeed a natural storyteller. . . . Her detailed account
of being a midwife in London's East End is gripping, moving, and
convincing from beginning to end." -Literary Review
"I loved the people, the nuns, the tough dockers, the prostitutes
and pimps, seen with the fresh eyes of youth." -The
Guardian
"Readers will fall in love with Call the Midwife . . . an
affirmation of life during the best and worst of times." -Elizabeth
Brundage, author of The Doctor's Wife
"Jennifer Worth's memories of her years as a midwife were at once
hilarious and tremendously moving." -Ayelet Waldman, author of
Love and Other Impossible Pursuits
"Worth is indeed a natural storyteller. . . . Her detailed
account of being a midwife in London's East End is gripping,
moving, and convincing from beginning to end." -Literary
Review
"I loved the people, the nuns, the tough dockers, the prostitutes
and pimps, seen with the fresh eyes of youth." -The
Guardian
"Readers will fall in love with Call the Midwife . . . an
affirmation of life during the best and worst of times." -Elizabeth
Brundage, author of The Doctor's Wife
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