A Scots writer has been shortlisted for the prestigious Wilbur Smith Adventure Writing Prize 2018.
Maggie Ritchie’s literary romantic thriller Looking for Evelyn is one of six novels recognised by the prize, which celebrates the best adventure writing.
Maggie said: ‘I’m so pleased that Saraband agreed to publish Looking for Evelyn, so pleased people are buying it, and unbelievably thrilled that I have been shortlisted for an award sponsored by such a talented and successful author.’
Looking for Evelyn transports the reader to another magical time and place: 40 years ago in the wilds of southern Africa.
Telling the dramatic story of two women who uncover the scandalous secrets that shattered a remote expatriate outpost in the Zambian bush in the 1970s, Looking for Evelyn powerfully evokes the very special colours, sounds and smells of Africa.
It is set against a background of tense post-colonial race relations, political turmoil and witchcraft, and it paints a vivid picture of life in an Africa that was gloriously beautiful but also incredibly dangerous.
Maggie grew up in Zambia and is an award-winning author and journalist who has written for the Daily Mail, Times, Herald and Daily Record.
She has an MLitt (Distinction) from the University of Glasgow.
Her debut novel, Paris Kiss (Saraband, 2015), won the Curtis Brown Prize, was runner-up for the Sceptre Prize and was longlisted in the Mslexia First Novel Competition. The German edition appeared on bestseller charts, and the novel has also been translated into Czech.
Other novels on this year’s shortlist for best published novel include: Rory Clements’ Nucleus (Bonnier Zaffre); Jane Harris’ Sugar Money (Faber & Faber); Tyler Keevil’s No Good Brother (Borough Press); Abir Mukherjee’s A Necessary Evil (Vintage); and James Wilde’s Pendragon (Transworld).
The winner of the £15,000 prize will be announced at a special ceremony in London on September 20.
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