All Things Cease to Appear: now a major Netflix new release Things Heard and Seen
By (Author) Elizabeth Brundage
Quercus Publishing
riverrun
11th April 2017
9th February 2017
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
813.6
Paperback
416
Width 128mm, Height 196mm, Spine 30mm
290g
'Ghosts, murder, a terrifying psychotic who seems normal, and beautiful writing. Loved it' Stephen King
'Can make you gasp in astonishment or break your heart with a single line' Wall St Journal'Superb. Think a more literary, and feminist, Gone Girl' VogueThis begins the morning Catherine Clare died. The day her daughter spent in the house with her. The evening her husband came home to find her. This becomes the tale of their marriage, and the ones around them. A tale of bonds between families, between lives living and lost and of the lonely ones that share no bonds at all. Who should be pitied. Who must be feared.Ghosts, murder, a terrifying psychotic who seems normal, and beautiful writing. Loved it - Stephen King
What, at first, seems to be a crime novel is much more, working on several levels. It's the painful story of a marriage that should never have happened . . . Not so much a whodunnit as a whydunnit, this richly imagined, sprawling novel contains scalpel-sharp dissections - Daily MailHaunting . . . Brundage exposes the mind of the killer in slow and forensic detail - Sunday TimesI bloody loved this. I could have taken weeks over it, lingering on the harmony and beauty of her language and the creeping delicacy of what was going on - but the plot and the people pull you in. . . A lot of people will be getting this for their birthdays this year. - Louisa YoungOne of the most ambitious, original and gorgeously written novels that I've ever read - and been unable to forget. - Caroline LeavittAll Things Cease to Appear is a riveting ghost story, psychological thriller, and literary page turner. At its heart, this is a story about women's grit and courage, will and intelligence. - Kate ChristensenAt once high art and a spellbinding thriller, this is a book of many wonders, including a character as creepily sinister as any created by Patricia Highsmith - Beverly LowrySuperb . . . think a more literary, and feminist, Gone Girl. As the seemingly perfect marriage at its core reminds us, the most lethal deceptions are the stories we tell ourselves - VogueElizabeth Brundage graduated from Hampshire College, attended the NYU film school, was a screenwriting fellow at the American Film Institute in Los Angeles, and received an M.F.A. as well as a James Michener Award from the University of Iowa's Writers' Workshop. She has taught at a variety of colleges and universities, most recently at Skidmore College as a visiting writer in residence. She lives near Albany in upstate New York.