My international bestselling debut novel:

The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart

Sometimes flowers can say the things words can’t.


Dear reader, meet Alice Hart.

An enchanting and captivating novel, about how our untold stories haunt us - and the stories we tell ourselves in order to survive.

After her family suffers a tragedy, nine-year-old Alice Hart is forced to leave her idyllic seaside home. She is taken in by her grandmother, June, a flower farmer who raises Alice on the language of Australian native flowers, a way to say the things that are too hard to speak.

Under the watchful eye of June and the women who run the farm, Alice settles, but grows up increasingly frustrated by how little she knows of her family's story. In her early twenties, Alice's life is thrown into upheaval again when she suffers devastating betrayal and loss. Desperate to outrun grief, Alice flees to the dramatically beautiful central Australian desert. In this otherworldly landscape Alice thinks she has found solace, until she meets a charismatic and ultimately dangerous man.

Spanning two decades, set between sugar cane fields by the sea, a native Australian flower farm, and a celestial crater in the central desert, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart follows Alice's unforgettable journey, as she learns that the most powerful story she will ever possess is her own.

2018 – my first author photo shoot for the publication of The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart, taken by Giulia Zonza in the studio of Frog Flowers, Manchester UK. It was February and snowing outside, while inside we transformed David’s floristry space into a native Australian flower fever-dream.

2019 Australian Book Industry
General Fiction Book of the Year

β€œ...delicate and dark as a fairytale, with violent details that stick to you like burrs. ...Ringland’s storytelling is driven by an undimmed sense of wonder at the darkness and light, the damage and love in people.”
— SYDNEY MORNING HERALD
β€œThis story about family, love, and reinvention is defiant in its sweetness and is stirring to its end.”
— FOREWORD REVIEWS USA
β€œThis lyrical coming-of-age story intertwines the history and the language of flowers with the lives of women.”
— SCHOOL LIBRARY JOURNAL USA
β€œA magical coming-of-age novel.”
— GOOD HOUSEKEEPING UK
β€œLush, powerful … an engrossing novel imbued with passion and reverence for the Australian natural world.”
— BOOKS + PUBLISHING AU
β€œPlunge into the wonderful world of Holly Ringland β€” where flowers have their own language and power, and the stories we tell become reality.”
— VG MAGAZINE NORWAY

Where to buy Alice Hart:

Australia

New Zealand

UK

Canada

USA

To find The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart published in your language, please check with your favourite local bookshop.

The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart is my debut novel, published in 2018. It is the first novel I’ve ever written (not including the 250,000 word River Phoenix / Baywatch fan fiction I wrote when I was 14 (it was 1994, everyone).

Since publication, Alice Hart has been published in 30 territories/languages around the world and become an international bestseller.* I am indebted to every publishing team behind my work, especially every translator.

One of the greatest joys of becoming an author with Alice Hart has been watching her find readers around the world.

*Years on, I still cannot say or write this without feeling somewhat ill, in the very best way.

Now a smash-hit TV series

In 2023, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart premiered globally on Prime Video as a 7-episode series starring Sigourney Weaver.*

*… I’m still figuring out how to come to terms with this.

The series was the most successful Amazon Original series worldwide with the biggest opening weekend viewership globally for any Australian launch on Prime Video: it reached the top 5 in 78 countries, and top 3 in 42 countries.

In 2024, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart received 12 AACTA nominations and won 3 awards including Best Miniseries.

While these statistics put me on the floor, maybe my favourite is that after the series launched there was a reported 1680% increase in global Google searches for the desert town and crater I made up in the novel!

How did it feel?

Adaptation is its own kind of storytelling: a translation, a reimagining, a different flower field grown from the singular seed.

Seeing the first novel that I wrote – this story especially – take another life from page to screen was one of the most surreal, joyous, challenging, difficult, and moving experiences of my creative life. It will stay with me always.

What this book means to me: an open letter to readers of
The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart

To talk about how I feel about this book is to talk about readers β€” especially those who first found me through The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart, and who changed my life by calling back to me.

Dear Reader,

It’s been twelve years since I wrote the first draft of The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart in 2014. Although I mostly managed the terror of writing it by convincing myself that no one would ever read it, there were still days at my desk when I couldn’t fool myself: I wanted this story to find its kin. I was driven by a deep, aching desire for connection. To use my voice. To roar the way I used to on childhood bushwalks, yelling the Dharug word cooee into the Australian bush, waiting with breath held to hear someone unknown and unseen, but on the same track, call cooee back. I’m here. You’re not alone. That’s what I hoped to feel in my writing; it’s what I hoped Alice and her story might offer others. But those hopes often felt so fragile that I could barely acknowledge them.

What’s happened since then has been anything but fragile.

This story has travelled further than I could have ever imagined, gathering generosity, connection, creativity, joy and courage along the way. Readers have shown me again and again what a book can become once it leaves a writer’s hands, how it can change lives. Maybe you’re one of those readers. You’ve written to me about your loves, longings, joys, scars and hopes. About grief, and fears carried and let go. About flowers, firestorms, lost homes, found homes and the slow work of returning to yourself. You’ve told me where you were in your life when Alice found you, and where you’ve taken her. And you’ve told me all the things she has given you: hope, courage, inspiration, kinship. In telling me these things, you haven’t only changed what this book means to me, you’ve changed my life.

I wrote Lost Flowers because I needed to know if I could honour the stories inside me, calling to my soul to be written, even while I was terrified of writing them. I didn’t know then how vividly and powerfully that story in me could be brought alive by being read. Now I do. You, dear reader, are why Alice Hart lives. Your response to my first novel has transformed my solitary, trembling act of writing into something deep, communal and more spellbinding than wildflowers: connection. Because of you, Lost Flowers is no longer only mine. It’s ours. We are connected through story.

As I write this letter, I’m struck again by the power of stories. How they can hurt us, yet offer us safety. How they can entrap us, yet help us see ourselves and each other with more courage and tenderness. Stories ask us to slow down, to listen, to feel deeply. They draw us back to our humanity when the world feels loud and overwhelming. I believe, more fiercely than ever, that stories matter because they remind us how to be with each other with curiosity, care and grace.

Writing Alice Hart’s story taught me that unfathomable beauty can still grow from the hardest ground. Hope is an electric, stubborn force, a practice rather than a passing feeling. What this book has given me through your reading of it is something I will never stop being grateful for: you’ve shown me the many astonishing forms courage and love can take.

Thank you for reading Lost Flowers, whether for the first time or the fifth. Thank you for carrying this story so fiercely and tenderly. And thank you, most of all, for whispering or roaring cooee back to me. We’re here. We’re full of joy and grief, fear and hope, and we’re not alone.

Have courage, take heart.




2026

The word 'Hello' written in a cursive, handwritten style.

A story that stays with you

One of the greatest honours of my writing life has been seeing readers carry the stories of my novels into their own lives – through letters, messages, photos, flowers, rituals, memories and tattoos shared with me from around the world.

These are some of the deeply moving tattoos readers have shared with me, inspired by The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart. I treasure each photo more than I can say.

Shared with permission. Names withheld for privacy.

The life this book has lived:

Alice Hart created new Slovak language!

If you’ve been reading along with me through the pages here, you’ll know by now that since it was first published in 2018, The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart has travelled far beyond anything I could imagine when I was writing it.

One of the strangest and loveliest things to happen with this book came with the Slovak edition, StratenΓ© kvety Alice Hartovej, when some of Alice’s flower meanings made their way into the Slovak plant-science lexicon! Alice Hart, somehow, had walked from my imagination into another language’s dictionary.

My Instagram post from June, 2018:

β€˜Today, my wonderful Slovakian translator, Veronika LaΕ‘ovΓ‘, sent me this message (pictured opposite - oh the clip art!).

You spend years fighting the 'what's the point' voice in your head to turn up at your writing desk every day and bleed your heart onto paper, and you never once imagine, it doesn't even register as a possible thing, that the act of what you're doing, the story you're making, could go on to live in languages other than your own, and not just that, but that it could give words (and plants from your homeland) to one of those languages, words that didn't exist before.

So there Alice Hart goes, into the Slovakian plant science lexicon, and soon-to-be onto Slovakian bookshelves. Colour me every shade of grateful.’

2019 Australian Book Industry winner: General Fiction Book of the Year

To win this award was one mindblowing thing. To have my mum and stepdad at a table in the closed room when it happened was another.

This is who they are. When Alice Hart and I were announced on the shortlist for this award, Mum promptly rang the Australian Book Industry (I did not know they even had a phone number) and bought two tickets at a table for the awards night. Then flew from Brisbane to Sydney with my beautiful stepdad to be there with me.

Being able to stand in front of a room of my peers and say Mum’s name, and publicly recognise and thank her for being my biggest champion and hero, is maybe the best moment of my writing career.
(Oh and that tattoo peeking out on her arm? She got that to mark Alice Hart being published – her first tattoo, in her 60s.)

The cover of the book titled 'The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart' by Holly Ringland features a black background with colorful illustrations of various flowers and green leaves surrounding the title and author's name.

For your book club!

Download my free reading notes to share and discuss with your book club.*

*Between nibblies, wine, flower-crown making, and cackling!

Ready to meet Alice Hart?

Australia

New Zealand

UK

Canada

USA

To find The Lost Flowers of Alice Hart published in your language, please check with your favourite local bookshop.