![]() It was a more epic story, with more historical and geographical detail, and more complicated – but with some of the same hallmarks that made her first novel so indelible: the Alaskan wilderness, the complications of married love, and a slightly mystical element rooted in the landscape and its people. When it came time to talk about Eowyn’s second novel – often a daunting prospect for authors and publishers alike, especially when the first has gone so well – she came to us with an idea that was very different from The Snow Child. Eowyn’s agent, Jeff Kleinman, was always a valuable voice along the way. We had so much fun and success with her first novel, The Snow Child, which Andrea Walker acquired and edited, and which Mary-Anne Harrington also published in the U.K., lending an editorial assist. With Eowyn Ivey, while I can think of few people more purely capable of doing just about anything, that’s been the case, and happily so. ![]() ![]() Arthur: As a wise woman once (or twice) said, it takes a village. ![]()
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