Captivating: Read an Extract from Twenty-Six Letters by Charlotte Nash

Captivating: Read an Extract from Twenty-Six Letters by Charlotte Nash

On the last Friday of April, Wilhelmina Mann really meant to be on time. But the Gold Coast autumn mornings were still balmy, so it was easy to leave her warm bed and make her way down to the beach for the sunrise.

She was only going for a quick look because she wanted to make sure today started in the best way. A reset after last Friday. The wet sand crunched under her toes, and she spun one foot around to dig a great circle. It would wash away in an hour as the tide turned, and by then Wil would be deep in bathroom renovations. Pity.

The sun was rippling up gloriously from the glassy sea, turning the scattered clouds pink and orange, and glinting golden off the high-rise glass behind the beach. A morning of ordinary wonders. Far too nice to be at work. But she wasn’t staying—she had promised herself she was going straight back to shower, dress and be at the site on time at six. Five to six, even!

She snatched up a sandy sea pen with a pleasing shape, washed her feet in the water, and turned to follow her tracks back up to the carpark. Her footsteps had made a path right through the centre of her sand circle, suggesting the trunk of a tree. Wil tipped her head, then dipped the sea pen to the sand, and swept the trunk line down to touch her circle. There. She liked the way an uneven lump of sand had made a shadowlike a tiny boulder on the edge of that line. She used her toe to push up another lump, then another, forming rocks around the beginnings of tree roots.

She came back to herself a few minutes later. The sea pen and her toes were sandy, her hair escaping its band. She had made the inscribed tree into a lush canopy across the top of the sand circle, and the spreading roots into a mass across the bottom. Perfectly balanced. She smiled, satisfied, just as she registered something amiss. The sun was higher now, the mellow glow of dawn burned away into a less friendly light. Wait, that wasn’t right…

Continue reading the extract here…

Buy a copy of Twenty-Six Letters here.

Reviews

Family, Place and Identity: Read Our Review of Twenty-Six Letters by Charlotte Nash

Review | Our Review

9 August 2022

Family, Place and Identity: Read Our Review of Twenty-Six Letters by Charlotte Nash

    Related Articles

    The Importance of Writing Strong, Female Characters: Words by Charlotte Nash, author of Saving You

    News

    13 February 2019

    The Importance of Writing Strong, Female Characters: Words by Charlotte Nash, author of Saving You

      Emotional, Entertaining and Well Crafted: Review of Saving You by Charlotte Nash

      News

      5 February 2019

      Emotional, Entertaining and Well Crafted: Review of Saving You by Charlotte Nash

        Publisher details

        Twenty-Six Letters
        Author
        Charlotte Nash
        Publisher
        Allen & Unwin
        Genre
        Fiction
        Released
        02 August, 2022
        ISBN
        9781761066528

        Synopsis

        Wilhelmina Mann can never seem to get anything right: her work, relationships and family are all on the rocks. But when she suddenly receives a stack of letters from her long-dead mother, everything she's ever known begins to change.

        On the eve of her thirtieth birthday, Wilhelmina Mann is already dealing with more than enough problems, so a birthday misadventure landing her in the lock-up is hardly even a surprise.

        But that mistake leads to Wil receiving a packet of old letters; letters to Wil from her mother that were written just before she died, back when Wil was a small child.

        Suddenly, Wil's life is thrown into a new kind of turmoil as she discovers the mother she lost. And while the letters begin as tales of growing up, they soon become a great love story, almost as great as the bond between mother and daughter. Caught in old, unexpected emotions and unresolved hurts, Wil risks everything to journey back to the tiny English village in which her mother grew up, searching for answers in another set of letters she is meant to find there.

        But secrets are kept for a reason. Will she find the last letters? And will she want to know what they contain?

        Twenty-Six Letters is a captivating novel entwining family, place and identity, the shame of keeping secrets and the liberation of finding them out.

        Charlotte Nash
        About the author

        Charlotte Nash

        Charlotte Nash was born in historic Lincoln, England and grew up in the sunny Redland Shire of Brisbane. Obsessed with horses and riding, she began stealing her mother's Jilly Cooper novels at the age of thirteen, and has been enthusiastic for romance ever since. Always a little unconventional, she took a meandering path to writing through careers in engineering and medicine, including stints building rockets and as an industrial accident investigator. Now she writes romantic stories, and moonlights as a creative writing PhD student, studying how narratives engage the brain. She lives in a cosy Brisbane cottage with her husband and son, and a small flock of loveable chooks.

        Books by Charlotte Nash

        COMMENTS

        Leave a Reply

        Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *