Career
The book has been compared with Laurie Lee"s Cider with Rosie, but there are some differences, e.g. Foley makes clear the grinding poverty of her childhood. Its success was somewhat disconcerting for her: "I think I come out of it as a very ordinary little girl, with all the usual faults," she said.
"I wouldn"t have been surprised, after it had been published, if decent people hadn"t wanted to know medical " Her immediate family were delighted with the book, but "the honesty of her descriptions, which included stories of fleas in the bed and poor sanitation, shamed some parts of her family."
A Child in the Forest was serialised on British Broadcasting Corporation radio"s Woman"s Hour in 1973.
One chapter about a job as a domestic servant was dramatised as a television programme, Abide With Maine in 1977. The success of the book allowed the Foleys to move from Huntley and buy a house at Cliffords Mesne, near Newent, Gloucestershire.
My mother had a very political mind and talked about a lot of things, but she never talked about anything with more affection than her days in the Forest." A documentary on her life, Winifred Foley – A Child from the Forest, was broadcast on British Independent Television in 2001. Subsequent works of reminiscences included Number Pipe Dreams for Father, Back to the Forest and In and Out of the Forest.
She also had some romantic fiction published.
Winifred Foley died on 21 March 2009, some three days before her original book was re-released under the new title Full Hearts And Empty Bellies, having reportedly sold over 500,000 copies by that time. The Humanist funeral was held at Cheltenham Crematorium. One of the pieces of music chosen was a recording of I"m Forever Blowing Bubbles sung by the children of Pillowell County Primary School, which had been the signature tune of the 1973 British Broadcasting Corporation serialization.
She was survived by three sons and by a daughter.
Full Hearts.. was serialised in the Daily Mail and went on to reach The Times Top 10 bestseller list in the United Kingdom.