Title: All the Birds, Singing
Author: Evie Wyld
Publisher: Random House Australia
Read: May 09-10, 2013
Synopsis (Goodreads):
Who or what is watching Jake Whyte from the woods?
Jake Whyte is the sole resident of an old farmhouse on an unnamed island, a place of ceaseless rains and battering winds. It's just her, her untamed companion, Dog, and a flock of sheep. Which is how she wanted it to be. But something is coming for the sheep – every few nights it picks one off, leaves it in rags.
It could be anything. There are foxes in the woods, a strange boy and a strange man, rumours of an obscure, formidable beast. And there is Jake's unknown past, perhaps breaking into the present, a story hidden thousands of miles away and years ago, in a landscape of different colour and sound, a story held in the scars that stripe her back.
Set between Australia and a remote English island, All the Birds, Singing is the story of one how one woman's present comes from a terrible past. It is the second novel from the award-winning author of "After the Fire, A Still Small Voice".
My thoughts:
All the Birds Singing is Australian fiction at its best –
gritty, atmospheric and suspenseful, it represents a true gem of the genre.
Jake Whyte is a young woman living an isolated life on her
recently purchased sheep farm on a remote English island. Scarred by a
traumatic past she avoids human contact, preferring the company of her dog to
that of other people. But there is an evil afoot, which kills her sheep at
night and makes its malevolent presence felt in the dark, even invading Jake’s
house. When an unexpected visitor arrives on Jake’s doorstep, she must weigh up
her avoidance of human contact against her need for help to combat the unknown
threat to herself and her lifestock.
All the Birds Singing is a dual time novel, starting with
Jake’s life in England at the present time. The other part of the novel is
cleverly constructed and offers snapshots of Jake’s troubled past in a backward
chronological order – from the most recent to the very unfortunate event in
Jake’s childhood which derailed her life and led to her current circumstances.
This may sound confusing, and can often be disruptive to the storyline in other
books, but Wyld’s storytelling is so accomplished that the unusual structure
only adds to the suspense and character development. Whilst Jake’s present
experiences form the main part of the mystery, her past slowly constructs the
character of Jake and gradually reveals her life story. To the reader, the
snapshots from Jake’s past feel like flipping through a photo album in reverse
order, from the present-tense Jake who is too old for her years to the innocent
young girl she once was.
Very much character driven, the novel centres around human
relationships and our innate need for company, no matter how dysfunctional. On
the dark side, there is Otto, whose motives are never fully revealed but carry
sinister undertones which paint a picture of increasing threat and simmering
violence, reflected also in the hostile environment Jake is trapped in.
Revealing the escalation of threat in a backward fashion makes it all the more
sinister and claustrophobic, watching a young Jake stumble into a terrible
situation, knowing how it will all end.
Lloyd, on the other hand, offers a kind of redemption and
hope to the story. Honest, guileless and with scars of his own, he appears just
as Jake is most in need of help. Whilst their relationship remained an enigma
to me, it also was the one which offered a way out of despair and made me close
the book with a sense of hope for the future.
Wyld perfectly captures the harsh atmosphere of outback
Australia and the struggle to survive in a hostile environment, which is often
as unforgiving as its people. Jake is a survivor, and her struggles really
touched my heart – even more so once the source of her fall from grace and loss
of innocence were revealed.
As the setting changes from Australia to rural England, so
does the novel’s language and overall atmosphere – from a gritty story of
survival to a mystery with almost paranormal overtones. As the evil closes in
on Jake’s present, I often reflected whether this presence was a true threat or
a metaphor for the menacing shadows from the past following Jake to her new
home. Wyld has a gift of creating suspense without the need for action or
artificially constructed plots – instead, the haunting atmosphere and the
unspoken things, the questions remaining, are the very details which kept me
reading until late into the night, unable to tear myself away. This is a novel
which would be perfect to read as part of a bookclub – it affected me so deeply
that I was aching to discuss it with someone and hear their view on scenes and
relationships which were left open to interpretation – like the earring in the
barn (this is not a spoiler, only readers of the novel will know what I am talking
about – wasn’t it the most sinister thing?).
I have not read Wyld’s first novel, After the Fire, but it
is now very firmly on my tbr list.
All in all, I loved this novel and its haunting atmosphere
will stay with me for some time to come. It is amongst the best I have read
this year, and implants Wyld firmly as one very talented Australian writer I
want to hear a lot more of in future.
A big thanks to the Reading Room and Random House Australia
for supplying me with a free advance reading copy of this novel in exchange for
an honest review.
This novel forms part of my 2013 Australian Women Writers challenge, as well as the 2013 Monthly Keyword Challenge (keyword "bird").
The idea of Jake being alone on a huge piece of land and something that could be lurking around watching her is totally creepy but sounds so interesting!
ReplyDeleteYes, it was very creepy & suspenseful and really well done - can fully recommend it! :)
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