Untitled
By (Author) Lucy Wood
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
1st August 2025
17th July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
Narrative theme: Sense of place
Narrative theme: Love and relationships
Paperback
336
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 21mm
270g
From the award-winning writer of Weathering, Diving Belles and The Sing of The Shore, a luminous novel, set in Cornwall, about secrets and memory, things lost and found and the tidal pull of home.
It was Tiny who found it. There was something at the edge of the beach, something long and tangled in the seaweed. Maybe it was and maybe it wasnt. She should go closer and check. Everything was moving: wind gusting, waves tipping over and sucking back over the stones. But over where the thing was it seemed very still and very quiet.
When a dead body washes up on a Cornish beach, two children are the only ones to see it before it is taken again by the sea. But its memory will haunt the children and those who live in the village over the coming years, stirring up gossip and guilt, love and betrayal and connecting them all in ways they never imagined.
Praise for The Sing of the Shore:
Heart-thumping miniature thrillers. Theres an uncanny, delicate quality to much of Woods prose that belies how difficult this kind of writing is to pull off Guardian
She constructs a vivid, uneasy fictional geography of modern Cornwall Jonathan McAloon, Spectator
The Sing of the Shore shows Lucy Wood at the top of her considerable game. Best enjoyed with the woodburner stoked up and hail lashing the windows, these discreetly linked stories conjure a wholly original Cornish Gothic: now sad, now funny, now so profoundly creepy youll check that dark corner of the room before continuing Patrick Gale, author of Notes from an Exhibition
Rain-drenched, windswept and haunted this is how I felt as I read The Sing of the Shore. Woods is a Cornwall filled with uneasy spirits, both living and dead, but that also welcomed me in with wry gossip and knowing looks. Absorbing, beautiful, and deeply uncanny, this collection soaked me through and will linger in my bones Zoe Gilbert, author of Folk
The sounds of the sea and the weather ripple through these eerie, exceptional stories set in a Cornwall that is, by turns, moody and melancholy, winder-filled and woebegone Eithne Farry, Daily Mail
The stories of The Sing of the Shore continue to resonate long after you have closed its covers, and form a remarkably fine collection, beautiful and unsettling Shiny New Books
These haunting, elegiac stories capture bleak moments of unfulfilled lives S Magazine, Sunday Express
Mesmerising short-story collectionthe writing is so good it is hard to resist Leaf Arbuthnot, Sunday Times
Elegant new collection of stories Every figure is wonderfully observed, their lives made poignant and moving in a few brief pages Lamorna Ash, TLS
Lucy Wood is the critically acclaimed author of Diving Belles, a collection of short stories based on Cornish folklore, and Weathering, a debut novel about mothers, daughters and ghosts. She has been longlisted for the Dublin Literary Award and the Dylan Thomas Prize, shortlisted for the Edge Hill Prize, and was runner-up in the BBC National Short Story Award. She has also received a Betty Trask Award, a Somerset Maugham Award and the Holyer an Gof Award.Weathering was named as one of The New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2016. She lives in Cornwall.