Articles
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2 months ago |
barnesandnoble.com | Evie Wyld |Isabelle McConville
The Heart of All of Us: A Guest Post by Evie Wyld A ghost haunts his girlfriend’s apartment and pieces together the secrets of their fraught relationship in this sharp and tender novel from the author of All the Birds, Singing. Read on for an exclusive essay from Evie Wyld on writing The Echoes. Hardcover $28.00 Please enable javascript to add items to the cart.
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2 months ago |
datebook.sfchronicle.com | Evie Wyld |Urban Waite
“The Echoes” by Evie Wyld. Photo: Knopf“The Echoes,” the fascinating and brilliant new novel from award-winning writer Evie Wyld, has a ghost in it. But this is not the ghost’s story, as much as this ghost — in his search for meaning — might want it to be. “I watch Hannah,” Wyld writes in the first few pages of the novel.
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Nov 11, 2024 |
countrynews.com.au | Evie Wyld
This month we have nine copies of two haunting stories by Australian authors to give away. They are about families and war, love and loss. Hold tight - we’re checking permissions before loading more content It is 1914, and the storm clouds of war are building on the horizon.
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Sep 30, 2024 |
thegoodwebguide.co.uk | Nigel Slater |Jilly Cooper |Evie Wyld |Becky Ladenburg
A book by one of Britain’s greatest cookery writers that doesn’t contain a single recipe. An odd premise? Perhaps. But spare a thought for the writer in question. Maybe this wise and thoughtful man and his wise and thoughtful publishers believe that he has sated our hunger for his recipes. He has penned a weekly food column for The Observer for 30 years, written 10 cookbooks and presented several TV series. Anybody can access the ravishing recipes on his beautiful website any time of night or day.
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Aug 1, 2024 |
literaryreview.co.uk | Evie Wyld
Most places are haunted, but the Australian outback has an especially bad ghost problem. People think of it as an empty land, but this is not accurate; it has been inhabited for millennia. What colonists regard as the beginning of Australia, Captain Cook’s arrival in 1770, was actually a violent end. The First Nations population, estimated to number 750,000 when Cook landed in Botany Bay, had fallen to around a hundred thousand by the early 20th century.
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