Del Sol Press winner of the inaugural
First Novel Prize for 2016
The book is now available on Amazon.
Read the announcement and an interview with Rebecca Winterer.
Del Sol Press winner of the inaugural
First Novel Prize for 2016
The book is now available on Amazon.
Read the announcement and an interview with Rebecca Winterer.
REBECCA WINTERER is the author of The Singing Ship, awarded the Del Sol Press 2016 First Novel Prize and selected as a finalist for the Black Lawrence Press 2016 Big Moose Prize. She’s received fellowships at the Millay Colony, the Vermont Studio Center, Virginia Center for Creative Arts, and Yaddo; and has had a story published by Puerto del Sol. She holds an MFA from Warren Wilson College and an MS in Physical Therapy from Columbia University. Raised in Queensland, Australia, she now lives in San Francisco, California with her husband.
“This novel is really breathtaking in its freshness, originality, and structural ingenuity.”
—Madison Smartt Bell, 2016 First Novel Prize Judge and author of All Souls’ Rising.
“In her phantasmagorical and compelling novel, Rebecca Winterer employs a Dreamtime all her own to sing an Australian family into existence. Not since Karen Joy Fowler’s Sarah Canary have I seen such a striking debut.”
—Andrea Barrett, National Book Award-winning author of Ship Fever
Rebecca Winterer’s novel, The Singing Ship, offers a depth and span of storytelling that simply amazes. Multiple stories vividly unfold in these wise, funny, wonderful pages set in a small town in Queensland. And always a single story asserts itself, breaking your heart wide open: the eternal story of leave-taking and all the entailing stories of love and loss that spill from that one story. “Sometimes time stalls,” says one character here, “or you stall, and your every day is the same – day in, day out – until one day something changes.” In this remarkable novel, you will newly experience how time sings, changeless and changing, through the human comedy.
—Kevin McIlvoy, Novelist, At the Gate of All Wonder (Tupelo Press).
To enter the world of Rebecca Winterer’s Pilgrim family is to go somewhere familiar yet foreign, a world where art, history, devotion, and denial are in constant communication. Like Audrey Pilgrim, Winterer has created a work of art that reflects the world around her in ways as unexpected as they are revealing.
–Peter Turchi, author of Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer
What a terrific read! Between the phenomenal language, the way I was caught by surprise (in the best possible way), and the uniqueness of the voice, I knew – instantly – this book was one of a kind. I couldn’t put it down and you won’t be able to either.
–Goldie Goldbloom, author of Gwen, The Paperbark Shoe, and You Lose These
Sisters Bernadette and Jane never speak about the day before Bernadette left for college, even as it drives them apart and defines their lives. A sophisticated debut.
–PEOPLE MAGAZINE