In 2003, Rogers co-founded the magazine Smoke: a London Peculiar.[12][13] After working as reviews editor on The Word, she became a full-time freelancer in 2007.[8]
In 2017 she scripted an audio guided tour, narrated by Jarvis Cocker, for ABBA: Super Troupers, an exhibition at the Southbank Centre, London, about the Swedish pop group ABBA.[16]
In 2022, Rogers published The Sound of Being Human: How Music Shapes Our Lives, an account of the emotional and psychological impact of music. Reviewing the book, Ian Rankin wrote "Too often we treat popular music as wallpaper surrounding us as we live our lives. Jude Rogers shows the emotional and cerebral heft such music can have. It's a personal journey which becomes universal. Fascinating."[17][18]
Personal life
She and her husband Dan, whom she married in 2011,[19] have a son, Evan, born in 2014.[1] They live in Monmouthshire, Wales, having moved there in 2016[20] from Leyton, north east London.[9]
Publications
Matt Haynes (editor) and Jude Rogers (editor): From the Slopes of Olympus to the Banks of the Lea, Smoke: a London Peculiar, 2013 ISBN978-0957568006
Jude Rogers and Alex Farebrother-Naylor: Pop!, Fisherton Press, 2016 ISBN978-0993077333
Jude Rogers: The Sound of Being Human: How Music Shapes Our Lives, White Rabbit Books (2022) ISBN9781474622929
References
^ abRogers, Jude (25 November 2014). "Roy Rogers, by Jude". My Old Man. Archived from the original on 21 January 2015. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
^ abcde"Jude Rogers". Faculty of Social Services and Humanities. London Metropolitan University. Archived from the original on 21 August 2013. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
^"Jude Rogers". New Statesman. Archived from the original on 31 December 2007. Retrieved 28 September 2013.