

Who could ask for more? Agent: Jill Marr, Sandra Dijkstra Literary. This elegantly constructed novel is intelligent, funny, and profound. The agent dies a few days later, and murders in the two realities begin to multiply. Leo’s emails shift from sycophantic to profoundly disturbing when his novel is rejected by Hannah’s agent. Leo’s emails influence Hannah’s view of her characters and subsequently Freddie’s story. Hannah is writing the story of Freddie Kincaid, who’s writing the story of the murder in the library. Freddie seizes on this incident as the ideal start for her new opus, which involves “a group of people united by a scream.” Each chapter of Freddie’s book includes a letter written to famous Australian author Hannah Tigone by a dedicated fan, Leo Johnson, a fellow writer in residence who offers to be her beta reader. While she’s seeking inspiration in the Boston Public Library, a woman’s scream breaks the silence. Leo has been unsuccessful in getting his book published. Leo is a fan of Hannah and he describes trying to write at the Boston Public Library. It begins with a Bostonian named Leo writing to an Australian author, Hannah Tigone. Australian mystery writer Winifred “Freddie” Kincaid has come to Boston after receiving a prestigious writers’ fellowship. The Woman In The Library by Sulari Gentill is a clever murder mystery that involves a story within a story.


Who could ask for more? Agent: Jill Marr, Sandra Dijkstra Literary.This thrilling excursion into metafiction from Australian author Gentill ( Crossing the Lines) wittily examines the writing process itself.

Australian mystery writer Winifred “Freddie” Kincaid has come to Boston after receiving a prestigious writers’ fellowship. This thrilling excursion into metafiction from Australian author Gentill ( Crossing the Lines) wittily examines the writing process itself.
