Headline Review swoops for HOW TO FIND A LOST LOVE by Norie Clarke

We are hugely excited to announce that Headline Review has snapped up HOW TO FIND A LOST LOVE by Norie Clarke. Publisher Sherise Hobbs acquired the rights  from Blake Friedmann’s Vice Head of Books Juliet Pickering, and the novel will be published in January 2024.

HOW TO FIND A LOST LOVE celebrates the joy of finding unexpected friendship in a story which also pays tribute to the lost art of writing a love letter.

When newly single Jess responds to an advert for a lodger, she meets Joan, living alone in her seventies in a Notting Hill house full of memories. When Jess learns Joan has a long-lost love, with whom she used to exchange letters via the Lonely Hearts column, Jess decides to search for him, little realising that in Joan’s story lies her own unexpected new beginning.

Sherise Hobbs said: ‘HOW TO FIND A LOST LOVE is as life-affirming as it is romantic. The two lead characters challenge each other to make a switch – Jess will come off-line and start writing letters if Joan will brave going on-line; a leap which changes both their lives in the most remarkable of ways. We can’t wait for readers to discover it next year.’

Norie Clarke said: ‘I’m thrilled and amazed to be working with Sherise and the stellar team at Headline Publishing. I hope readers will grow to love Jess and Joan in HOW TO FIND A LOST LOVE as much as I loved creating them.’

Juliet Pickering said: ‘Jess and Joan work build a compelling, moving and beautiful friendship together, and create a story that’s unforgettable. I loved Norie’s tender writing from the outset and can’t wait for readers to relish it too.’

 

About Norie Clarke

Norie Clarke lives in a beautiful village by the sea with her husband, son and dogs. When not writing, Norie can be found in her studio at the bottom of her garden playing the piano and trying, not very well, to draw.

‘A Short Trip to Tesco’ by Shani Akilah Longlisted for the Writers’ & Artists’ Short Story Competition 2023

Congratulations to Shani Akilah, whose story ‘A Short Trip to Tesco’ has been longlisted for the  Writers’ & Artists’ Short Story Competition 2023.

Shani’s story was one of sixteen selected from over 850 entries to this year’s competition, themed around ‘Writing Love’. The announcement of the shortlist and winner, picked by writer Naomi Booth (EXIT MANAGEMENT, SEALED), will be made on the Writers’ & Artists’ website by the end of April. The winner will receive a place on an Arvon Foundation Writing Retreat.

‘A Short Trip to Tesco’ will appear in Shani’s upcoming debut short story collection.

Picture: Jonathan Osibo

About Shani Akilah

 Shani Akilah is a 28 year-old Black-British writer from South London of Caribbean heritage (Guyana, Barbados and Jamaica). She is an avid reader and book blogger and was spotlighted as a ‘Key Black Influencer’ by DoubleDay Books.

 Shani is passionate about community and bringing people together and is the co-founder of Nyah Network, a book club for black women and is also the founder of contributor based platform, Bankra, that explored the navigated identities of black millennials.

 Shani loves travelling, and has spent significant time in Ghana as part of her studies. Shani has a Masters degree in African Studies from Oxford University with research exploring counter-diasporic return and issues of home and belonging amongst second-generation British-Ghanaians.

 Follow Shani on Twitter.
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Canelo acquires two new romances from Caroline Khoury

Canelo has signed two standalone contemporary romances by Caroline Khoury. Editorial director Emily Bedford bought world English language rights from Kate Burke in a two-book deal. The first title, STILL UNWRITTEN, is out in paperback and ebook in February 2024, followed by the second book in 2025.

STILL UNWRITTEN stars K-pop star JC, lead singer of soon-to-be global sensation JYNKS. To Francesca, he's Choi Jae-Seung, the new barista at her London coffee shop. When her agent tells her that she has 48 hours to find the passion missing from her auditions to land the acting role of her dreams, Jae-Seung offers to help. Together they embark on 'a journey that will not only test the limits of their dreams, but also stoke the embers of the forbidden attraction between them.'

Caroline Khoury said: ‘I am thrilled to be continuing my writing journey with Canelo and know that STILL UNWRITTEN - my K-pop inspired romance - is in excellent hands with my new editor Emily Bedford. I was completely blown away by Emily's passion for the novel and believe she has the vision to take my writing to the next level. This book is very close to my heart and takes you on a journey from the suburban London town I grew up in to South Korea, Sicily and North Carolina. I am beyond excited to partner with the excellent team at Canelo to bring Francesca and Jae-Seung's love story to readers.’

Emily Bedford said: ‘I couldn't be more excited to work with Caroline; the moment I picked up STILL UNWRITTEN I knew I had something special on my Kindle. From her warm and deeply human characters, her ability to bring any setting - be it New Malden or Seoul - to crackling life on the page, to the sizzling chemistry between Francesca and Jae-Seung, there is so much to love about Caroline's writing that I cannot wait to share with readers. As a big K-pop fan myself, this is an absolutely dreamy romance for me to have the opportunity to publish!’

Kate Burke said: ‘I'm so excited about this deal. Caroline and I were blown away by Emily and Canelo's brilliant pitch, and I can't wait for readers to get their hands on STILL UNWRITTEN!’

 

Caroline Khoury is also author of romances IT MUST BE LOVE (Century, 2022) and ALWAYS YOU, which Century will publish in print and Bolinda in audio in April 2023.

Kerry Hudson’s new memoir NEWBORN to be published by Chatto & Windus

Image: Nick Tucker

Becky Hardie, Deputy Publishing Director at Chatto & Windus, has acquired rights in UK & Commonwealth territories (including Canada) to Kerry Hudson’s powerful new memoir NEWBORN from Juliet Pickering.

NEWBORN is a beautiful, empowering memoir about creating a family in the midst of chaos, and learning new ways to find happiness. It continues the journey Kerry started in her bestselling memoir LOWBORN, illuminating her experiences of becoming a mother, reshaping her future and reclaiming her identity.

Kerry Hudson is celebrated for her emotionally and politically powerful writing about growing up in poverty. Her books and journalism have changed the conversation and touched countless lives.

In this new book she asks: what next, after a childhood like hers? What hope is there of creating a different life for herself, let alone future generations? We see how Kerry found love, what it took to decide to start a family of her own and how fragile every step of the journey towards parenthood was. All along the way, she faces obstacles that would test the strongest foundations, from struggles with fertility to being locked down in a Prague maternity hospital to a marriage in crisis. But over and over again, her love, hope, fight – and determination to break patterns and give her son a different life – win through and light her path.

Kerry Hudson says: ‘As with LOWBORN, this continues the tradition of writing the book I needed to read myself. I know I am one of many who experiences the aftershocks of childhood deprivation and who has complicated or estranged relationships with their own mothers. I didn't have a map for motherhood or a blueprint for building a healthy family but in this book I explore how, with love, laughter and the hardest lessons, it is absolutely possible. Though I never say this, I'm very proud of this book. It's as candid as anything I've ever written and I hope it will, as LOWBORN did, find the readers who truly need it.'

Becky Hardie, Deputy Publishing Director of Chatto & Windus says: ‘Ever since Chatto published her first novel, we’ve watched as Kerry’s beautifully open and honest writing has reached and inspired more and more readers. She truly has changed lives, and the publishing industry. In this new book, she faces perhaps the biggest challenge yet: how to build a family when you don’t have a model to work from. As it turns out, this isn’t perhaps the biggest challenge, and she will need to draw more than ever on the adventurous spirit, resilience, sense of humour and empathy she is so celebrated for.’ 

Chatto & Windus will publish NEWBORN in hardback in Spring 2024.

About Kerry Hudson

Kerry Hudson was born in Aberdeen. Growing up in a succession of council estates, B&Bs and caravan parks provided her with a keen eye for idiosyncratic behaviour, material for life, and a love of travel.

Her first novel, TONY HOGAN BOUGHT ME AN ICE-CREAM FLOAT BEFORE HE STOLE MY MA (Chatto & Windus), was published in July 2012 and was shortlisted for eight literary prizes, including the Guardian First Book Award and Green Carnation Prize, and won Scottish First Book of the Year. Kerry’s second novel, THIRST, was developed with support from the National Lottery through an Arts Council England grant, and published by Chatto in July 2014 before being shortlisted for the Green Carnation Prize. Her first work of non-fiction, LOWBORN (2019) became a Times bestseller and was hailed as ‘One of the most important books of the year’ by The Guardian.

Published in France as La Couleur de L'eau by Editions Philippe Rey, translated by Florence Lévy-Paolini, THIRST was the winner of prestigious literary prize, Prix Femina Etranger 2015, going on to become a bestseller in France. It was also shortlisted for the European Strega prize in Italy, after being published there as SETE, by Minimum Fax.

Kerry also wrote the script for HANNAH, which was broadcast on BBC Four, starring Emma Fryer, as part of SKINT, a series of seven 15-minute monologues tackling the subject of poverty in the UK. HANNAH tells the story of a mother who is trying to do the best for her child whilst facing homelessness.

Kerry writes for various publications including The New York Times, Guardian, Big Issue and Press and Journal, and is a columnist for The Herald. In 2022 she was nominated for Columnist of the Year in the Regional Press Awards. In 2020, Kerry was elected as a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature.

She currently lives in Glasgow.

Praise for Kerry Hudson

‘A fearless writer, an inspiring woman’ – Jackie Annesley ― The Sunday Times

‘It’s not just Kerry Hudson’s writing that is vibrant, authentic and true, it’s the person herself, it’s where the writing comes from; a wise and generous heart.’ – Kit de Waal

‘There are few writers who use their work to shine a light on working class lives, and fewer still who use their success, as Kerry herself said recently in The Guardian, ‘to send the elevator back down’ to help those waiting in the basement to make their way up. Kerry Hudson is one of those writers who stands out for her empathy and passion and her tireless championing of the excluded.’ – Paul McVeigh

Follow Kerry on Twitter