All the Birds, Singing: A Novel
All the Birds, Singing: A Novel book cover

All the Birds, Singing: A Novel

Paperback – January 6, 2015

Price
$16.95
Format
Paperback
Pages
240
Publisher
Vintage
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0345802507
Dimensions
5.21 x 0.63 x 7.95 inches
Weight
8 ounces

Description

**One of the Best Books ofxa0the Yearxa0in the Guardian, New Statesman, Independent, Observer ** **Shortlisted for the James Tait Black Prize, and the Costa Award for Best Novel****Winner of the Encore Award for Best Second Novel****Winner of the Miles Franklin Literary Award** “Daring and fierce. . . . From the very first sentence of Wyld’s brilliantly unsettling novel, you’re thrust into a world of violence, dread, and psychological mystery. . . . The writing flood[s] every page with menace.” — The Boston Globe “Swift and assured and emotionally wrenching. You won’t only root for Jake, you’ll see the world, hard facts and all, more clearly through her telling.” — The New York Times Book Review “Broodingly lyrical. . . . Casts a spellbinding breadcrumb trail back in time to reveal the origins of Jake’s banishment—and the darker mysteries of human nature.” — Vogue “Purely gorgeous. . . . Wyld ramps up the tension. . . . There’s love as well as dread in this book, a surprising sort of love—the best kind of all.” — The Washington Post “Gloriously gruesome [and] lushly visceral. . . . To say that Wyld’s writing makes the art of sheep shearing come alive for the reader may not sound like a particular compliment, but oh, it is—she makes it sing with flea-coated, dung-crusted eloquence. . . . Half of you wants to race through to find out what happens, half wants to pause over the dark, clotted sentences. And then the state of suspense becomes almost unbearable. . . . The final revelation, when it comes, is explosive.” — NPR.org “Dark and wickedly captivating. . . . It’s nearly impossible not to get swept up in the game of merging the two stories by piecing together each clue Wyld keeps stashed away to reveal at the most opportune moment. . . . Think Room or Winter’s Bone -style creepy. . . . A gripping novel.” — San Francisco Chronicle “A suspenseful and melancholy novel. . . . Wyld [demonstrates] masterful control. There are also surprising moments of lightness—the protagonist’s dark humor, the author’s unsentimental reverence for the natural world.” — The New Yorker “Utterly gripping. . . . The book has the brisk pacing of a well-thumbed pocket paperback found in a summer cottage, and yet it’s the sort of book that gets listed as a best book of the year. . . . The mystery of what’s going on with the sheep in All the Birds, Singing , were it the book’s only subject, would make for a fun read on its own. But the sheep are only the beginning.” — Salon “An atmosphere pungent with menace and panicked uncertainty. . . . Wyld teasingly leads readers to the mysterious incident Jake is trying to escape . . . Wyld keeps her readers in a blinkered state and then spooks them.” — The Wall Street Journal “Tantalizes. . . . The prose maintains a fine-tuned ominous mood. . . . The most impressive aspect of the novel is its structure.” — The New York Times “Wyld displays a fierce command of language. . . . She tackles a variety of difficult themes—memory and trauma chief among them—with considerable care.” — The Daily Beast “A tremendous achievement . . . A dark, powerfully disturbing and beautifully observed story . . . almost Nabokovian in its structural intricacy.” —William Boyd, New Statesman “Outstanding . . . Evie Wyld is the real thing . . . She reconfigures the conventions of storytelling with a sure-footedness and ambition which belie her age . . . Quite as good as Ian McEwan’s early fiction.” — The Spectator “Extraordinarily accomplished, one of those books that tears around in your cerebellum like a dark firework, and which, upon finishing, you immediately want to pick up again.” — Financial Times “An intensely involving tale of survival, shot through with Wyld’s distinctive wit . . . An indelible and atmospheric novel that will have the hairs on the back of your neck working overtime.” — Daily Mail “For once, the hype matches the talent . . . Wyld’s writing seems to come from somewhere deep, somewhere a little bit unnerving.” — The Sunday Times (London)xa0“Vividly drawn . . . When the birds do ‘sing,’ and Jake’s primal tragedy is revealed, it is clever and very unexpected indeed.” — The Guardian EVIE WYLD grew up in Australia and London, where she currently resides. Her first novel, After the Fire, a Still Small Voice, won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and a Betty Trask Award, and All the Birds, Singing won the Miles Franklin Literary Award and the Encore Award for Best Second Novel. Wyld has also been short-listed for the Orange Award for New Writers, the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, the Commonwealth Writers Prize, the James Tait Black Prize, and the Costa Novel Award, and long-listed for the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1xa0Another sheep, mangled and bled out, her innards not yet crusting and the vapours rising from her like a steamed pudding. Crows, their beaks shining, strutting and rasping, and when I waved my stick they flew to the trees and watched, flaring out their wings, singing, if you could call it that. I shoved my boot in Dog’s face to stop him from taking a string of her away with him as a souvenir, and he kept close by my side as I wheeled the carcass out of the field and down into the woolshed.xa0I’d been up that morning, before the light came through, out there, talking to myself, telling the dog about the things that needed doing as the blackbirds in the hawthorn started up. Like a mad woman, listening to her own voice, the wind shoving it back down my throat and hooting over my open mouth like it had done every morning since I moved to the island. With the trees rattling in the copse and the sheep blaring out behind me, the same trees, the same wind and sheep.xa0That made two deaths in a month. The rain started to come down, and a sudden gust of wind flung sheep shit at the back of my neck so it stung. I pulled up my collar and shielded my eyes with my hand. Cree-cra, cold, cree-cra, cold. “What are you laughing at?” I shouted at the crows and lobbed a stone at them. I wiped my eyes with the back of my hand and breathed in and out heavily to get rid of the blood smell. The crows were silent. When I turned to look, five of them sat in a row on the same branch, eyeing me but not speaking. The wind blew my hair in my eyes.xa0#xa0The farm shop at Marling had a warped and faded sign at the foot of its gate that read FREE BABY GUINEA PIGS. There was never any trace of the free guinea pigs and I had passed the point of being able to ask. The pale daughter of the owner was there, doing a crossword. She looked up at me, then looked back down like she was embarrassed.xa0“Hi,” I said.xa0She blushed but gave me the smallest of acknowledgements. She wore a thick green tracksuit and her hair was in a ponytail. Around her eyes was the faint redness that came after a night of crying or drinking.xa0Normally the potatoes from that place were good, but they all gave a little bit when I picked them up. I put them back down and moved over to tomatoes, but they weren’t any good either. I looked up out the window to where the farm’s greenhouse stood and saw the glass was all broken.xa0“Hey,” I said to the girl, who when I turned around was already looking at me, sucking the end of her pencil. “What happened to your greenhouse?”xa0“The wind,” she said, taking her pencil to the side of her mouth just for a moment. “Dad said to say the wind blew it in.”xa0I could see the glass scattered outside where normally they kept pots of ugly pink cyclamen with a sign that said THE JEWEL FOR YOUR WINTER GARDEN. Just black earth and glass now.xa0“Wow,” I said.xa0“Things always get mad on New Year’s Eve,” said the girl in an older voice that surprised both of us. She blushed deeper and turned her eyes back to her crossword. In the greenhouse, the man who normally ran the shop sat with his head in his hands.xa0I took some oranges and leeks and lemons to the counter. I didn’t need anything, the trip was more about the drive than the supplies. The girl dropped her pencil out of her mouth and started to count oranges, but wasn’t sure of herself and started again a few times over. There was a smell of alcohol about her, masked by too much perfume. A hangover then. I imagined an argument with her father. I looked up at the greenhouse again, the man in it still with his head in his hands, the wind blowing through.xa0“Are there nine there?” she asked, and even though I hadn’t counted as I put them in the basket I said yes. She tapped things into the till.xa0“Must be hard to lose the greenhouse,” I said, noticing a small blue bruise at the girl’s temple. She didn’t look up.xa0“It’s not so bad. We should have had an order over from the mainland, but the ferry’s not going today.”xa0“The ferry’s not going?”xa0“Weather’s too bad,” she said, again in that old voice that embarrassed us both.xa0“I’ve never known that to happen.”xa0“It happens,” she said, putting my oranges in one bag and the rest in another. “They built the new boats too big so they aren’t safe in bad weather.”xa0“Do you know what the forecast is?”xa0The girl glanced up at me quickly and lowered her eyes again.xa0“No. Four pounds twenty please.” She slowly counted out my money. It took two goes to get the change right. I wondered what new thing she’d heard about me. It was time to leave, but I didn’t move.xa0“So what’s with the free guinea pigs?”xa0The flush came back to her face. “They’ve gone. We gave them to my brother’s snake. There were loads.”xa0“Oh.”xa0The girl smiled. “It was years ago.”xa0“Sure,” I said.xa0The girl put the pencil back in her mouth and her eyes fluttered back down to her crossword. She was just colouring in the white squares, it turned out.xa0In the truck, I found I had left the oranges in the shop. I looked out of my rear-view mirror at the smashed greenhouse and saw the man inside standing up with his hands on his hips looking at me. I locked the doors and drove away without the oranges.xa0It started to rain heavily, and I turned up the heating and put the wipers on full speed. We drove past the spot I usually stopped to walk Dog and he sat in the passenger seat and stared at me hard, and every time I turned to look at him he put his ears up, like we were mid-conversation and I was avoiding his look. “So what?” I said. “You’re a dog.” And then he turned around and looked out the window.xa0#xa0Midway home it caught up with me and I pulled over into the entrance to an empty field. Dog gazed stoically out the window, still and calm, and I pressed my thumb into the bridge of my nose to try and take away the prickling, clung on to the skin of my chest with the nails of my other hand to melt away that old -thudding ache that came with losing a sheep, a bead of blood landing in an open eye. I cried drily, honking and with my mouth open, rocking the truck and feeling something grappling around inside me getting no closer to coming out. Have a good cry; it was the kind of thing Mum’d say to a triplet in the hope a visit to the hospital wasn’t necessary. Like the time Cleve fell out of a tree and cried it out, and we found out later he had a broken arm. But there was nothing good in my crying—it prevented me from breathing, it hurt. I stopped once my nose began to bleed, cleaned it up with the shammy I used on the days the windows were iced on the inside and drove home, calmly. On the Military Road near to the turning home, some teenagers fondled about at the bus stop. When they saw me coming one of the boys pretended to put something in his mouth, another mounted him from behind and humped him while he mimed throwing a lasso. The girls laughed and gave me the finger. As I rounded the corner the boy with the lasso dropped his trousers and showed his white arse.# Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From one of
  • Granta
  • ’s Best Young British Novelists, an emotionally powerful, award-winning novel about an outsider haunted by an inescapable past. Jake Whyte has retreated to a remote farmhouse on a craggy British island, a place of ceaseless rains and battering winds, with only her collie and a flock of sheep as companions. But something—or someone—has begun picking off her sheep one by one. There are foxes in the woods, a strange man wandering the island, and rumors of a mysterious beast prowling at night. And there is Jake’s relentless past—one she tried to escape thousands of miles away and years ago, concealed in stubborn silence and isolation and the scars that stripe her back. With exceptional artistry,
  • All the Birds, Singing
  • plumbs a life of fierce struggle and survival, sounding depths of unexpected beauty and hard-won redemption.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(486)
★★★★
20%
(324)
★★★
15%
(243)
★★
7%
(113)
28%
(453)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Once it picks up, it's hard to put down

This is one of those books where the pacing and atmosphere get full credit for the constant feeling of tension and foreboding.

Jake Whyte lives and works on a sheep farm on a remote British island. Independent and self-sufficient, she mostly keeps to herself, harboring a secretive past. When her sheep begin getting killed in gruesome ways, Jake becomes paranoid that it's more than just the local foxes. Is it local kids? Someone from Jake's past who has come to find her? Or could it be a mysterious beast rumored to prowl the area at night?

Two separate narratives play out throughout the novel: Jake's present-day life, and the story of her past, which is brilliantly told in reverse chronological order to gradually unravel truths about her past.

The dread is near-constant—but understated with Wyld's sparse, brooding prose. We know that something(s) bad has happened to Jake, but we don't know the full extent of her story until the very end. And this is one of those situations where the truth might change the way you view everything else.

This dark and menacing novel came close to getting a slightly higher rating from me, but I had to knock it down a little bit due to some forgotten sub-characters and a slow start. Once it picks up, though, it's hard to put down.
20 people found this helpful
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Unusual Structure but Worth the Trouble!

Before you start reading this unusual book, you need to understand the structure. Otherwise you will get frustrated and in all probability not finish it. That would be tragic because it is a well-written, fascinating story. Evie Wyld created a world from the point of view of a very unreliable character. Her name is Jake. Yes, that's right. A boy's name in a girl's body. Trust me that isn't the only anomaly in this book.

Wyld writes in a breezy, easy to read style. But she creates complex characters. Her structure fascinated me, a writer. As a reader I may have been less fascinated. You begin the story in Jake's point of view in the present time. That first chapter sets up Jake's present world but in the past tense. The second chapter flashes back to Jake's earlier life, but told in the present tense. Now the fun begins. Chapter three continues moving the present forward. So far, you're thinking, what's so strange about this? Right? Here we go into Chapter four. Wyld takes us into the past, but closer to the present. In other words, the present chapters move forward in time and the past chapters move backward. Got it?

You may say that's too confusing to read, but don't. Once I realized the pattern, I was anxious to keep reading. You know something very bad happened in Jake's to bring her to the present state she was in. You know she was running from someone or something. As the past moves further back in time, a little is revealed, but not all is revealed until the very end. The pieces of the puzzle finally come together at the end. Quite satisfying.
As an animal lover, I had some trouble with the descriptions of the slaughter of sheep. Other than that, I found the book an excellent read. Wyld writes like a poet. Every word counts. Here's one example:

"There's that solid heat that gets bounced down on us from the tin roof, and the flies in here are fat and damp--when they land around your mouth, you feel like you've been kissed by something dead."

What is this story about? It's about survival. It's about tragedy.
20 people found this helpful
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Yawn

I got on Amazon with all intentions of getting this for my Kindle. I happened to see the book was available used. For the first time on the site, I went for the used book at under $5. Even that meager amount was too much. I really disliked the book. The authors wordage was lovely at times, I just didn't care for what she had to say. The book was easy to follow even though it went back and forth in time. It dragged on and on and I had to force myself to finish it. Sheep are interesting, but we could only hear so many times about shearing them. The characters were not well developed, and I didn't like one of them. Also the ending was simply awful. Will there be a second in the series to this.Who knows. All I know is I sure as heck won't be reading it at any price.
5 people found this helpful
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Absolute Trash

I would give this book zero stars, but that's not an option. This book has no purpose. It has no values to share. It has nothing of worth to give the life this woman lived purpose. It is basically prostitute in Australia gone hippie sheepherder on an island in England. And it's told backwards, in segments of current time, flashback, current time, flashback. It's hard to follow. I finished it because any book I buy, I feel compelled to finish reading. If I had gotten it at the library, I would have just taken it back after the first few pages. The characters, even the heroine, are not likable. The sheep have more personality. I won't be reading this author again.
3 people found this helpful
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Well written but I need more closure from the books I read

This book is fuzzy at times and slow at revealing details and explaining itself, but the gist of the plot is that it's about Jake Whyte, a young sheep farmer with a shady background and even shadier acquaintances. The story is told in alternating chapters, with one chapter being narrated in past tense what is happening presumably in present day, where Jake Whyte's sheep keep getting killed and strange things happen around her house. The opposite chapters are told in present tense, and detail what happened to Jake before she became a sheep farmer. Her mysterious past is slowly unfolded in these chapters, however, they're told in reverse chronological order. Think Memento, but in book-form.

At first I found the book confusing, before I realized that the structure of the book was alternating chapters with some going forward and the others going backward. Even once I figured this out, the book was still confusing and hard to follow at times. I began to really enjoy the storyline once I was several chapters in, but ultimately the conclusion of the book was a disappointment to me. I kept waiting for the alternating chapters to finally come together and clear up a lot of the mystery and confusion about Jake's life, but I didn't end up getting the closure that I wanted from this book. I found the book to be well-written and it's clear to me the author can write, however I wasn't as absorbed in the tale as I wanted to be, because of my confusion and frustration as the alternating chapters continued on. This coupled with the fact that the ending didn't provide too many answers for me left me wishing I hadn't read the book.
3 people found this helpful
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A brilliant novel in structure, language, plot and character

This is a brilliant novel. The structure is breathtaking - with the present story running chronologically and the past story starting at the near present and then working its way backward. Both sets of narration are fully realized, but I found the past more absorbing in part because we see how Jake (the female protagonist) exercises her agency even within the exploitative situation of being a kept woman for a lonely man on a sheep station in Australia. Jake escapes to a remote island off the British coast, outrunning her troubles in Australia, and takes of sheep farming herself. She is dogged by something killing her sheep as she is dogged by isolation due to all the defenses she's built up. Jake is an original character and the writing is beautiful. I loved this book.
2 people found this helpful
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Not worth the time

This is the kind of book that makes highly respected reviewers who praised it look like they are on the take, crazy or downright just didn't read the book because they had no time or interest. It has nothing to offer, no characters worth knowing, no plot, no stunning writing. How does this even get published?
2 people found this helpful
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One Star

Waste of time, confusing and had an ending that was anticlimactic and rife with dissatisfaction.
2 people found this helpful
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Five Stars

exciting
1 people found this helpful
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Imaginative & Inventive Story-telling

If you mix The Village and Memento with some of the most beautiful writing I've read in a long time, you have this book. A mesmerizing, expertly-crafted story that does everything right. Wyld takes a stale story structure--alternating chapters telling two stories--and turns it on its head. It's inventive and engrossing and absolutely wonderful. This is one of those 'why didn't I read that sooner?!' books. Highly recommend anyone who enjoys good literary fiction, and even mystery/suspense. An easy 5 stars from me.
1 people found this helpful