Tell the Wolves I'm Home is a tender story of love lost and found, an unforgettable portrait of the way compassion can make us whole again.
Carol Rifka Brunt grew up in the suburbs of New York City and now lives with her family in the southwest of England. She has published short fiction and non-fiction in The North American Review and The Sun. In 2006 she was one of three fiction writers selected for the New Writing Partnership's New Writing Ventures award and in 2007, she received a generous Arts Council grant to write Tell the Wolves I'm Home, her first novel. Tell the Wolves I’m Home, was named a best book of the year by Wall Street Journal, O Magazine, Kirkus, BookPage and Amazon, was a Barnes and Noble Discover pick, Target club pick, Costco Pennie’s pick, an ALA Alex Award winner and has sold in 16 countries. She is currently writing her second novel. Amy Rubinate is a voiceover actor, audiobook narrator and singer living in Los Angeles. Amy leaped into voiceover playing LeapFrog’s Tad, which led to work singing and voicing characters on children’s television, interactive toys and video games. She has also done extensive work in commercial, corporate and IVR voiceover. As an audiobook narrator, Amy has received AudioFile’s Earphones Award, and was selected for Booklist’s Top 10 Historical Fiction on Audio, 2012. She has a degree in Oral Interpretation of Literature, and won state and national awards for poetry reading.
'[A] transcendent debut ... Peopled by characters who will live in
readers' imaginations long after the final page is turned, Brunt's
novel is a beautifully bittersweet mix of heartbreak and hope.'
*Booklist*
'A poignant debut ... Brunt's first novel elegantly pictures the
New York art world of the 1980s, suburban Westchester and the
isolation of AIDS.'
*Kirkus Reviews*
'Set at the height of the Aids crisis, this is a touching
debut.'
*The Daily Express*
'Tremendously moving ... Brunt strikes a difficult balance, imbuing
June with the disarming candor of a child and the melancholy wisdom
of a heart-scarred adult.'
*The Wall Street Journal*
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