The Hope a Yellow Bird Can Bring: Read an Extract from This Could Be Everything by Eva Rice

The Hope a Yellow Bird Can Bring: Read an Extract from This Could Be Everything by Eva Rice

Yesterday evening, something happened. And I don’t like things happening to me, it’s why I stay put, so that they don’t. But when I walked downstairs at eight minutes past eight for a glass of water, I saw a small yellow bird standing on top of a packet of Weetabix in the corner of the kitchen.

An instinct made me look behind me, as if someone might be standing there watching me watching the bird, but there was no one; Ann had forced Robert to the theatre, and they wouldn’t be back for hours. The bird took off again, and this time it flew across the room towards me, and I stepped back in alarm, then felt a wave of fury, as though the bird was mocking me for being afraid of it, and it was right, I was afraid. It flew onto the salad bowl in the middle of the kitchen table, and it scraped its beak against the green china edge, and then it lowered its yellow head in quick, jerky movements down into the bowl and took a bite from a lettuce leaf. Then it looked up at me with black eyes, and I heard a light buzzing in my ears, the sort that you have if you’re going under an anaesthetic or you’re about to faint, and I felt one of those Mexican waves of anxiety that started deep in my toes and swooshed up my body to the top of my head.

I walked around to the other side of the table so that if the bird took off again, it would fly back towards the window, and out again the way that it had come. But it didn’t. Even when I flapped my arms around a bit, and tried to wave it out, it wouldn’t leave. It couldn’t seem to fly great distances; it was as if it didn’t know what to do with all the space. It settled briefly on a tube of cling film on top of the fridge, and shook itself, seeming to take stock, like good old Dennis Rodman pulled out of a Pistons game, pausing for a moment to think.

I gulped into the room. There was a tightness inside me, a vertigo, like that time on the high ropes at Casey Finch’s sixth birthday party when I went up and up and up without Diana and looked down to see her crying on the ground below, and the earth had swum and sickened me.

I felt an urge to lie down in the middle of the kitchen floor with my eyes closed. I closed my eyes and strained to hear Bruno on the radio and the song coming from the stereo in my bedroom upstairs, but instead I could hear the noise of fluttering wings, primitive, frightening little wings, and I opened my eyes again. Then the bird made a sound, a chirp, if you will, and I drew in my breath and went still as still, because honest to God, it felt like a lion had roared…

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A Life-Affirming Coming of Age: Read Our Review of This Could Be Everything by Eva Rice

Review | Our Review

13 March 2023

A Life-Affirming Coming of Age: Read Our Review of This Could Be Everything by Eva Rice

    Publisher details

    This Could be Everything
    Author
    Eva Rice
    Publisher
    Simon and Schuster
    Genre
    Fiction
    Released
    22 March, 2023
    ISBN
    9781398510173

    Synopsis

    It’s 1990. The Happy Mondays are in the charts, a 15-year-old called Kate Moss is on the cover of the Face magazine, and Julia Roberts wears thigh-boots for the poster for a new movie called Pretty Woman.February Kingdom is nineteen years old when she is knocked sideways by family tragedy. Then one evening in May she finds an escaped canary in her kitchen and it sparks a glimmer of hope in her. With the help of the bird called Yellow, Feb starts to feel her way out of her own private darkness, just as her aunt embarks on a passionate and all-consuming affair with a married American drama teacher.This Could be Everything is a coming-of-age story with its roots under the pavements of a pre-Richard Curtis-era Notting Hill that has all but vanished. It’s about what happens when you start looking after something more important than you, and the hope a yellow bird can bring…
    Eva Rice
    About the author

    Eva Rice

    Eva Rice has written 5 novels and is the author of the Sunday Times bestseller The Lost Art of Keeping Secrets - a post-war coming-of-age story that was runner-up in the 2006 Richard and Judy Book of the Year. A 10th anniversary edition of the novel was published in 2015 with a foreword by Miranda Hart. The Lost Art Of Keeping Secrets is currently being developed by Fudge Park (creators of The Inbetweeners) and Moonage Pictures (Pursuit of Love) as a major new TV series.Eva has toured with bands since her early twenties. She has written the music and lyrics for Harriet, a musical based on an early Jilly Cooper novel due to open in 2023. She has a geek-like fascination with pop music, and her party trick is recalling chart positions.

    Books by Eva Rice

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