Julie Owen Moylan is the author of three novels- That Green Eyed
Girl, 73 Dove Street and Circus of Mirrors. Her debut novel That
Green Eyed Girl was a Waterstones' Welsh Book of the Month and the
official runner up for the prestigious Paul Torday Memorial Prize.
It was also shortlisted for Best Debut at the Fingerprint Awards
and featured at the Hay Festival as one of its 'Ten at Ten'. 73
Dove Street was a Waterstones' Books of 2023 and a Daily Mail
Historical Fiction Book of the Year. As a filmmaker Julie won the
Celtic Media Award for her graduation film "BabyCakes" before going
on to win Best Short Film at the Swansea Film Festival. Her writing
and short stories have appeared in a variety of publications
including Sunday Express, The Independent, New Welsh Review and
Good Housekeeping. She has a Masters in Filmmaking and an
additional qualification in Creative Writing & English Literature.
Julie is an alumna of the Faber Academy.
Julie can be found on Instagram- @JulieOwenMoylan and her website-
JulieOwenMoylan.com
Loved this . . . I was gripped from the first page and eked out the
last chapters as I didn't want to leave the smoky clubs of 1950's
Manhattan. A stellar line-up of brave, complicated and bright women
. . . prepare to lose yourself in a tale of love, loss and
deceit
*Sara Cox, Radio 2 DJ and host of BBC 2’s Between the Covers*
Summer sparkles in this book and so does the prose!
*Damian Barr*
A gorgeous, evocative novel that's part love story, part coming of
age and part mystery. But all parts are superlative!
*Red Online*
I so enjoyed That Green Eyed Girl. The atmosphere of city heat and
dust and stifling apartments was so vividly evoked. And I was
equally invested in both narrative strands . . . I was hooked from
the beginning
*Clare Chambers, author of Small Pleasures*
It's beautifully written and particularly wonderful on forbidden
love, loss and forgiveness
*Daily Mail*
I loved this. Dovie and Ava are both such compelling characters and
the evocation of time and place so strong - I was irresistibly
drawn into their stories. Sad, rage-inducing and uplifting - a very
emotional read
*Harriet Tyce, author of Blood Orange*
Julie Owen Moylan expertly places her readers in a New York
apartment, where you feel the heat and hear the tinny radio . . .
There's a cinematic quality to this novel; the characters are
deftly drawn and emotionally engaging, and the plot develops at the
right pace, with unexpected twists. An accomplished debut
*Woman & Home, BOOK OF THE MONTH*
That Green Eyed Girl takes hold of you and draws you along. I loved
the little connective details between the timelines and the
unravelling of the gentle mystery of it all. Hits a perfect
bittersweet note - I predict big things
*Kate Sawyer, author of The Stranding*
With an intriguing opening line and a camera-like gaze, the author
places her readers in a New York apartment, where you feel the heat
and hear the tinny radio . . . The characters are deftly drawn and
emotionally engaging, and the plot develops at just the right pace,
with unexpected twists. An accomplished debut
*Woman's Weekly*
The mystery at the heart of this novel had me hooked from the
start. I spent a weekend sitting in 1950s bars, listening to jazz
with Gillian and Dovie, then skipping ahead twenty years to walk
the same streets with Ava, remembering the awkwardness of being a
teenager. Heartbreaking but with a satisfying ending, I will
remember this book for a long time
*Louise Hare, author of This Lovely City*
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