The House of Riverton
The summer of 1924. A young poet takes his own life by the lake on the great English estate of Riverton. The only witnesses are sisters Hannah and Emmeline Hartford. Autumn 1999. Ninety-eight-year-old Grace Bradley, once a maid at Riverton, is visited by a young filmmaker who wants to make a film about the poet's suicide and asks Grace to tell her what she knows. And Grace begins to remember. Stories of life and death, love and betrayal follow, secrets solved and unsolved, surprising events and unexpected twists and turns line up against the backdrop of two world wars and the seemingly uneventful life of an upper-class English family. A compelling plot set in the context of History, and a remarkable first novel whose well-deserved success instantly ranks the author among the best English-language writers.
Stay tuned for Homecoming.
Kate Morton
Kate Morton is eldest of three sisters. She was born in South Australia and moved with her family numerous times before settling, finally, on Tamborine Mountain. There she attended a tiny country school and spent much of her childhood inventing and playing games of make-believe with her sisters.
Although she’d read and scribbled from before she could remember, it hadn’t occurred to Kate, until that time, that real books were written by real people. She began writing in earnest and completed two full-length manuscripts (which lie deep and determinedly within a bottom drawer) before settling finally into the story that would become The House at Riverton (The Shifting Fog). Meanwhile, Kate graduated from the University of Queensland with First Class Honours in English Literature and took up a scholarship to complete a Masters focusing on tragedy in Victorian literature.
The House at Riverton was a Sunday Times #1 bestseller in the UK in 2007 and a New York Times bestseller in 2008. The Shifting Fog won General Fiction Book of the Year at the 2007 Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA), and The House at Riverton was nominated for Most Popular Book at the British Book Awards in 2008.
Her second book, The Forgotten Garden, was a #1 bestseller in Australia and Spain, and a Sunday Times #1 bestseller in the UK in 2008. It won General Fiction Book of the Year at the 2009 Australian Book Industry Awards and was an Amazon Best of the Month pick and a New York Times bestseller in 2009.
The Distant Hours was an international bestseller in 2010 and won General Fiction Book of the Year at the 2011 ABIAs.
The Secret Keeper debuted at #8 on the New York Times Bestseller List and has won a number of other awards and accolades including the 2013 ABIA for General Fiction Book of the Year and The Courier-Mail’s People’s Choice Queensland Book of the Year.
Kate’s books are published in 38 countries and in 32 languages. She continues to write the sorts of books she can disappear inside.