11/08/2025
Was too busy talking about this wonderful book we forgot to take proper photos but it was such a delight to have back in store for her second novel Until the Red Leaves Fall.
Not only is this book a great read but it also shines light on a moment in Australian history unknown to many.
Signed copies of both Until the Red Leaves fall and At the Foot of the Cherry Tree available in store!
🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁🍁
‘Emmy Darling has a secret. She has a few. Her lemon meringue pie is a recipe from a women’s magazine, she’s always wanted to be a playwright, and the best parts of her husband Sebastian’s plays are the scenes she’s written during edits. But when charismatic theatre impresario and leading lady, Virginia van Belle, insists Emmy write about her wartime experiences as the lead play in her 1957 season, Emmy is faced with every writer’s dilemma.
Because Emmy’s biggest secret is that her name is actually Emiko Tanaka. She and her Japanese-Australian family were arrested, brutally split up and held in internment camps by the Australian government after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. And it’s this secret that Virginia wants to bring to the masses.
As Emmy struggles to determine where the edges of truth and fiction blur, Virginia’s vision of the story morphs into something more sensationalised. Emmy can’t ask for Sebastian’s help - he has his own history with Virginia - but she confides in Isadora Westlake, a dancer at a nearby coffee lounge, who knows a thing or two about keeping secrets.
As opening night looms and rewrites threaten to transform Emmy’s personal history into something unrecognisable, wounds of the past are torn open, jeopardising everything Emmy holds dear. As the cast take their places and the curtain goes up, Emmy must decide which is right: tell the story or tell the truth.’