Claire Van Ryn Claire Van Ryn i(26029503 works by)
Gender: Female
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2 y separately published work icon Where the Birds Call Her Name Claire Van Ryn , Melbourne : Penguin , 2025 29171818 2025 single work novel

'Broome 2023: When Saskia’s free-spirited mother leaves her a caravan in her will, it doesn’t make sense. Saskia is a schoolteacher, tied to plans and schedules, even if they are beginning to feel restrictive. Then she finds clues in the van about her mother’s mysterious past, setting her on a journey to Tasmania with her young daughter Anouk, who shares her late grandmother’s fascination with birds.

'In 1968, teenager Greta De Winter seeks solace in the Stanley wetlands, a swamp that attracts all manner of wildlife. Her father is the local councillor and her mother a taxidermist, working to create bird dioramas for the Tasmanian Museum and Art Gallery. But while the De Winter household seems harmless from the outside, a dark secret hides within.

'When Saskia and Anouk arrive in Stanley, they search for the missing pieces to the puzzle of Greta’s tragic childhood. In the process of uncovering her family history, Saskia realises that her mother’s final act might also enable her to rediscover who she really is, and what she is truly capable of.

'Set in the breathtaking landscape of Tasmania’s majestic north-west, this is a moving and highly evocative novel of family bonds and betrayals, by the bestselling author of The Secrets of the Huon Wren.' (Publication summary)

1 y separately published work icon Forty South Short Story Anthology 2024 Claire Van Ryn , David Owen , Rayne Allinson , Hobart : Forty South Publishing , 2024 28845521 2024 anthology short story

'In 2023, Hobart was designated a UNESCO City of Literature. We always knew there was something special about our beloved town, with its myriad bookshops, reading groups, publishers and award-winning authors. But this news has given writers and bibliophiles something tangible to celebrate: we now have international recognition of Tasmania's world-class literary landscape, with its distinctive creative energy and potential. This year we are especially delighted to include the winning stories from the Junior and Senior sections of our Young Tasmanian Writers' Prize 2023. The quality and imagination of these stories was so impressive that we felt they warranted publication. We hope their inclusion here will inspire other young Tasmanians to dream new stories of their own.'  (Publication summary)

2 y separately published work icon The Secrets of the Huon Wren Claire Van Ryn , Melbourne : Michael Joseph , 2023 26029541 2023 single work novel

'A deeply moving novel of love and loss set in the majestic mountains of Tasmania's Central Highlands.

'Senior journalist Allira is writing a story for Folk magazine when she meets Nora, a nursing home resident with dementia and a doll cradled lovingly in her arms. Bit by bit, Nora reveals details about her younger life as a spirited teenage girl living beneath the Great Western Tiers in Tasmania's heartland, of stitching linings into coffins, of her illicit romance with a charming Polish-German migrant, and of a family torn apart by heartbreak.

'As the two women form an unlikely friendship, Allira becomes helplessly drawn into the old woman's story. When Allira opens up to Nora about her own recent tragedy, the secrets embedded in the story of a carved Huon pine wren become the key to a life-changing discovery from the past. It is a revelation that finally fills in the missing pieces of Nora's history and has the power to set them both free.

'Set among the picturesque mountain ranges of Tasmania's Central Highlands, and moving between the 1950s and the present day, The Secrets of the Huon Wren is a lyrical and highly evocative story about two lives connected by a shared tragedy, and a universal love.' (Publication summary)

 
 

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