Bel Mooney
Beryl Ann "Bel" Mooney is an English journalist and broadcaster. As of 2025, she currently writes a column for the Daily Mail, having previously written – mainly as a columnist – for other publications including the Daily Mirror, The Times, The Sunday Times and The Listener.
She has written a number of fiction and non-fiction books and was instrumental in the foundation of the Stillbirth Society, now known as Sands.
Early life
Mooney was born in Broadgreen Hospital, Liverpool, to Gladys and Edward Mooney. She spent her earliest years in Liverpool on a council estate called The Green on Queens Drive. She passed her 11-plus and went to Aigburth Vale High School for Girls. At the age of fourteen Mooney moved to Wiltshire, where her parents bought their first house. She then attended school in Trowbridge, Wiltshire, at Trowbridge Girls' High School. Mooney passed eight O levels and took English, Latin and Art at A level. She applied unsuccessfully to the University of Oxford, before going on to study English Language and Literature at University College London, where she obtained a first in 1969. She was made a fellow of UCL in 1994.Career
Journalism
Upon graduating from university Mooney worked as a freelance journalist. From 1979 to 1980 she was a columnist on the Daily Mirror. She has also been a regular columnist for The Times, The Sunday Times and The Listener.As an author
Mooney is the author of the Kitty and Friends series of stories for young girls. Her novel for children The Voices of Silence won a New York Public Library citation and was shortlisted for a gold medal in the State of California.As well as fiction, Mooney has written many other books, including Bel Mooney's Somerset and a memoir about love, loss, recovery – and dogs: Small Dogs Can Save Your Life.