Joanna Horton âPowerful and mesmerising, Catching the Light is a brilliant portrait of the ways we are consumed by motherhood, art and the yearning for self.ââShankari Chandran, Miles Franklin awardâwinning author of Chai Time at Cinnamon Gardens and Safe Haven âImmediately gripping and thrillingly nuanced, this is a novel youâll devour in a rush and then savour for a long, long time.ââDiana Reid, bestselling author of Love & Virtue and Signs of Damage Â
Water, sand, hills, the painter was out at sea, looking towards the shore. Impossible to say whether he was coming in or going out. When Sylvie, a single mother yearning for a creative spark, meets Michael, a renowned painter, she feels something she hasnât felt in years. Impulsively she decides to uproot her life and move to Isaiah, an artistsâ colony, with her teenage daughter, Alice. To Sylvie, Isaiah seems to offer a second chance at the things sheâs sacrificedâfreedom, love and artâbut her relationship with Michael begins to affect the closeness she once had with her daughter. Without her motherâs knowledge, Alice engages in an act of teenage defiance that will shape both their lives.
Years later, Alice, a PhD student, is sought out by Caroline, an art historian researching Michael for a retrospective of his work. As their conversations tease out long-buried memories, Alice grapples with her past and Carolineâs hidden agenda.Sometimes itâs all a matter of perspective. Â
PRAISE FOR CATCHING THE LIGHT: âCatching The Light is a stunning work of fiction, at once bold and intricately woven. An enthralling read.ââEliza Henry-Jones, author of Salt and Skin âCatching the Light is a beautiful, adventurous novel about complicated and enduring love. A smart, stunning portrait of parenthood and mother-daughter bonds. Horton's writing is captivating, lush, and incredibly moving.ââLaura Elvery, author of Trick of the Light and Ordinary Matter âA nuanced dissection of art, morality and motherhood. Joanna Horton holds these principles to the light and shakes loose their unspeakable truthsââAdriane Howell, author of Hydra âThis is a beautiful novel. It is at once subtle and expansive, shifting across place and time without simplifying or overstating complications of memory and perspective. It is evocative and moving, gently weaving many threads together.ââAnna Kate Blair, author of The Modern PRAISE FOR BETWEEN YOU AND ME:
âItâs the language of this nuanced novel that did it âŚÂ Between You and Me lingers in my mindââCanberra Times
âJoanna Horton's debut is strong on female friendship, and she creates a crisp, effortlessly authentic narrative voiceââSydney Morning Herald
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Genres:
Fiction
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