Books by Emma Neale
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A young man is found unconscious in a remote forest. He is over seven feet tall, his skin covered in thick hair which reminds onlookers of an animal's pelt. When he wakes in a city hospital, he is eerily uncommunicative. Speculation begins. Medics want to run tests on him, t ...
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Eighty of the finest poems on parenthood brought together in an endearing, intelligent and accessible anthology by editor Emma Neale.
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This new collection of poetry will enchant and provoke, comfort and delight. From the hilarious 'True Pregnancy Tales' to the sobering 'The First Stone', in which the author recounts her small child grappling with the adult concepts of war and revenge, Neale moves between storyte ...
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Marie believes that she saw her best friend who disappeared 15 years ago. Could it really be her? The chance sighting in a railway carriage takes Marie back through the years to try to understand what happened to her best friend and why. In doing so, she is forced to confront her ...
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Julie loves her brother, calling him Little Moon and turning to him in times of difficulty. But the terrible accident, when she is only five years old, stains her life and the relationship between Julie's mother and her second husband, Ryan.
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The Marshall twins seem to be ideal siblings, but when you're so like someone else, who are you, really? To work out who she genuinely is, Candy begins to believe she must separate from her brother for good. But to do so would be at what grave cost?
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Beautifully written, psychologically deep and tender, Emma Neale's latest novel probes behind the facades of New Zealand family life.
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A collection of short fiction by writers who have attended four notable writing courses: Bill Manhire's Victoria University graduate course;Owen Marshall's fiction writing course at Aoraki Polytechnic;Harry Ricketts' short fiction workshop at VUP;and Witi Ihimaera's creative writ ...
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The first collection of poetry by Emma Neale. It deals with families and friendship, love, relationships and the daily details of people's lives.
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This work alternates playful and meditative moods, its subject matter shifting balance with the tilt of the mind and heart - from love and loss, to arson and whiskey, to Central Otago and the heroines of 19th century novels, to black chickens and red oil paint.
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