About
Victoria Muggridge has ghostwritten 48 books across self-development, narrative nonfiction, and memoir. She has generated over $576,000 for clients through sales of independently published books alone. She understands what makes a nonfiction book work—not in theory but from having written them.
Victoria is an experienced teacher, qualified aromatherapist, and coach.
I finished the final read-through, and I could feel the weight of it lift from my shoulders. This wasn't any ordinary book. She wasn't an ordinary client. And as I closed the laptop, I knew it wasn't going to be an ordinary day.
The emotional labour that goes into a book is staggering. It's like being handed someone else's child and waving goodbye to them for six months. You think about the story constantly. About the way it feels when a woman does something courageous. When she writes words and feels lighter. When she doesn't explain—but shows she lived the scenes. When everyone goes quietly devastated in the best possible way.
The story makes her strong again. Instead of crawling under the nearest rock, she finds the fuel to steer her life into a new hemisphere.
Only when you've worked with someone does a little piece of you root with them. In the same way, a little piece of them comes home with you.
That's the meaning of writing work. That's the impact we all want to create.
I began writing books for aspiring authors the same day I accompanied my daughter to a doctor's appointment, and her GP found a breast tumour in my chest.
In the 24 months that followed, I generated over $576k for my clients through book sales and writing alone.
Before that, I'd escaped domestic violence with nothing. I didn't believe there was a future out there for a woman like me. Three years later, I was living my childhood dream—running my own writing business, built from the one thing nobody could take from me.
My voice.
I am a ghostwriter and book coach for women writing memoir, creative nonfiction, and authority books. I work with women at midlife who have survived something significant and are ready to turn that experience into a book that changes what's possible for them.
The books I write are independently published, which means she owns every word, every right, and every penny she earns. This road is for women who have spent long enough asking permission—that matters.
This year, I am running writing retreats in the UK (by application) five-day intensives in the homes of British writers where women come with a story and leave with the beginning of a book.
If you have something important to say and need someone to help you say it, you're in the right place.
This is where your story begins.
