Check out an Extract From Denise Leith’s Gripping New Novel, The Night Letters

Check out an Extract From Denise Leith’s Gripping New Novel, The Night Letters

‘I’ll never get used to it,’ Tawfiq said as they drove into the square.

Sofia knew what he was talking about. ‘I quite like it,’ she offered, looking at Behnaz’s turquoise gate. Three months previously Sofia had returned from her annual holiday in Sydney to find Behnaz’s old brown gate painted vivid turquoise. When she complimented Behnaz on the gate’s makeover the only response she got was a ‘humph’. When she queried Behnaz about the colour choice she got the silent treatment. It was left to Iman to fill Sofia in on the scandal of Behnaz’s turquoise gate.

Behnaz’s nephew, who had been staying with his aunt while Sofia was away, had been put to work painting the gate. Being an enterprising fellow, and careful with his afghani, the nephew secured a half-used can of turquoise paint from a friend for half a packet of cigarettes. While most people, including Ahmad, Hadi and Tawfiq, didn’t like the turquoise gate, Iman said the reaction of Ahmad’s wife, Badria, had been particularly harsh, although she suspected that the ‘miserable’ Badria had not only been offended by the vibrancy and beauty of that particular shade of turquoise but had felt betrayed by Behnaz, who she considered to be a kindred dour spirit. Iqbal found the whole thing an amusing diversion in the square, Rashid had no opinion, and Jabril and Zahra, whose home had mauve trimmings, quite liked it, but Iman positively loved it…

Continue reading the extract here…

Reviews

Denise Leith on her Incredible New Novel, The Night Letters

Review | Author Related

21 October 2020

Denise Leith on her Incredible New Novel, The Night Letters

    Gripping and Personal: Read our Review of The Night Letters by Denise Leith

    Review | Our Review

    19 October 2020

    Gripping and Personal: Read our Review of The Night Letters by Denise Leith

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          Publisher details

          The Night Letters
          Author
          Denise Leith
          Publisher
          Ventura Press
          Genre
          Fiction
          Released
          07 October, 2020
          ISBN
          978-1-920727-48-2

          Synopsis

          For five years, Australian doctor Sofia Raso has lived in Kabul’s vibrant Shaahir Square, working with Dr Jabril Aziz to support the local women. She knows that living peacefully in Kabul requires following two simple rules: keep a low profile; and keep out of local affairs.Yet when threatening night letters from the Taliban taunt the town, and young boys disappear from Jamal Mina, Kabul’s largest slum, Sofia can no longer remain silent. While the square is encased by fear, an elegant former warlord proves an unlikely ally, and a former lover re-emerges with a warning. As the search for the boys intensifies, and Sofia feels herself being drawn back into a love affair she thought had ended, it soon becomes clear that answers will bring a heavy price.Gripping and evocative, The Night Letters takes you to the heart of Kabul in a story of secrets, friendship and love in all its imperfect guises.‘Full of wonderful prose and with a stunning sense of place, The Night Letters is a story of love, betrayal, corruption and friendship. It made me weep and cheer.’ – Michael Robotham, author of When She Was Good‘A bittersweet and astonishingly detailed narration of both the simplicity and complexity of life in Afghanistan. What I loved about the book is that it does not represent Afghan women as passive and docile, but you will learn about their stories of bravery, struggles, and persistence.’ ­– Aalam Gul Farhad
          Denise Leith
          About the author

          Denise Leith

          Denise Leith is a Sydney author, and former lecturer of International Relations, and Middle East politics at Macquarie University. Her debut novel, What Remains (Allen & Unwin, 2012) was shortlisted for the Asher Award and the Fellowship of Australian Writers National Literary Awards - Christina Stead Award. She has also published two non-fiction works, The Politics of Power (University of Hawaii Press, 2002), and Bearing Witness: the Lives of War Correspondents and Photojournalists (Random House Australia, 2004). Denise’s work has involved extensive travel, including time in an AIDS hospital in South Africa, in a refugee camp in the Middle East and in an isolated village in the mountains of West Papua. Denise has spent a number of years mentoring Afghan women in fiction and non-fiction. She currently resides on the Northern beaches of Sydney.

          Books by Denise Leith

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