My second international bestselling novel:

The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding

Sometimes a story has to be shed before joy and truth can surface.


A hardcover book titled 'The Seven Skins of Esther Walding' with an intricate illustrated cover featuring butterflies, flowers, seaweed, and a heron.

Dear reader, meet Esther Wilding.

'On the afternoon that Esther Wilding drove homeward along the coast, a year after her sister had walked into the sea and disappeared, the light was painfully golden.'

The last time Esther Wilding's beloved older sister Aura was seen, she was walking along the shore towards the sea.

In the wake of Aura's disappearance, Esther's family struggles to live with their loss.

To seek the truth about her sister's death, Esther reluctantly travels from Lutruwita, Tasmania to Copenhagen, and then to the Faroe Islands, following the trail of the stories Aura left behind: seven fairy tales about selkies, swans and women, alongside cryptic verses Aura wrote and had secretly tattooed on her body.

The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding is a sweeping, deeply beautiful and profoundly moving novel about the far-reaches of sisterly love, the power of wearing your heart on your skin, and the ways life can transform when we find the courage to feel the fullness of both grief and joy.

A woman in a long beige dress with blue earrings stands in the ocean with waves at her feet, under a pinkish-purple cloudy sky.

2022 โ€“ my author photo shoot for the publication of The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding, taken by Daniel Boud at Maroubra Beach on Gadigal Country. It had rained all day; weโ€™d been shooting in a studio. Just before sunset, the sky cleared. Daniel looked at me and I at him and we (including our team) legged it to the sea. Worth it.

Booktopiaโ€™s 2022 Book of the Year

A Barnes & Noble 2024 Booksellerโ€™s Choice

Close-up of a butterfly with brown and blue markings on its wings.
โ€œThis intercontinental journey into joy, grief, nature and magic confirms Holly Ringland as one of Australiaโ€™s most precious, life-changing storytellers.โ€
— BOOKTOPIA
โ€œOne of my favourite novels.โ€
— BETH KEMPTON UK + USA BESTSELLING AUTHOR
โ€œRich in fairy tales and folklore ... the stories of the women in this book will certainly get under your skin.โ€
— RIVERBEND BOOKS AU
โ€œRingland blends genres, combining mystery with strong female characters to create a book that is an epic heroineโ€™s journey.โ€
— WEST TRADE REVIEW USA
โ€œA mythological journey as much as an unfolding mystery, full of symbols ... a magical, witchy, quirky, luminous book.โ€
— THE AUSTRALIAN
โ€œVivid and soaring ... a haunting story of trauma and redemption.โ€
— BOOKS + PUBLISHING AU
โ€œRingland truly knocks it out of the park with her ability to display such powerful backstories and complex personalities that spill off every page.โ€
— WHITE WALL REVIEW CANADA

Where to buy Esther Wilding:

Australia

New Zealand

UK

Canada

USA

To find The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding published in your language, please check with your favourite local bookshop.

The image that started Estherโ€™s story:

Kรณpakonan, the Seal Woman, in the Faroe Islands.

The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding is my second novel, published in 2022. I wrote it through the pandemic, when writing fiction often felt impossible. This story carried me. Esther kept me believing in our capacity to face grief and still, despite everything, embrace love, courage, joy and transformation.

In some ways, like all of my novels, itโ€™s been a story Iโ€™ve been waiting to write all my life. My ancestors are Celtic and Scandinavian and I grew up hearing their stories of the sea, lost children and seal people at the place where the best were told: my grandmotherโ€™s kitchen table.

Since publication, Esther Wilding has been published in 14 territories/languages around the world and become an international bestseller.* I am indebted to every publishing team behind my work, especially every translator.

Following the success of Alice Hart, I promised myself while writing my second novel, that my job was to write from my heart โ€“ not from pressure, expectation, or fear.

Seeing readers embrace Esther Wilding so passionately is a deep, continuing joy.


*Years on, I still do not know how to cope, or what to do with my hands when talking about this.

My first Canadian and US Book Tour!

Thank you to every North American indie bookshop, library and conversationalist who hosted me, and every reader who came out to celebrate the launch of Esther Wilding and share their love for Alice Hart with me too.

A collage of photos and text panels from a book tour event. It features groups of people, mostly women, at a book signing, various books including 'The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding' by Holly Ringland, and mentions of author events such as 'Lost Flowers of Alice Hart'. There are images of signed books, readers at events, and individuals holding or discussing books, with labels describing the event details and participants.
Design by Lisa Reidy

Stories that stay 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 โ€“ 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 Seven Skins of Esther Wilding. I treasure each photo more than I can say.

Shared with permission. Names withheld for privacy.

Inside Estherโ€™s world:

Kanalaritja

shell necklaces

An excerpt from The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding:

Esther sitting next to Aura, two teenagers on the white sand. At their backs, towering blue gums and coastal heath bushes. The sea rolls out in front of them like a jewellerโ€™s velvet mat. In gentle breeze and warm sun they sit, holding shell jars, minding flasks of tea and packets of biscuits, all the while watching the women on the shore. Nin, Queenie and others in their family stand in calf-deep saltwater, bent at the waist, trousers rolled up, sweeping their hands through fronds of golden bull kelp. Every now and then pausing to pluck an inconspicuous brown shell off a frond and drop it into a clear, small jar. Later the shells will be taken home, cleaned out and, by an ancient practice unknown to Esther and Aura, become piles of iridescent gems on Queenieโ€™s shell-stringing table. Glowing in captivating purples, blues, greens, pinks, silver and gold, the colours of an Aurora sky. As if the shells were lit from within.

โ€“ Chapter 6

Frame with a white rectangle bordered in turquoise, surrounded by a ring of conch shells.

Kanalaritja by Ashlee Murray

I am indebted to the community of Pakana women who so generously and tirelessly worked with me on this book, who gave me permission to use Pakana language, and shared culture and stories and guidance with me so that I could include kanalaritja in Estherโ€™s story. Namely Theresa โ€œNanny Sparklesโ€ Sainty, Zoe Rimmer, and Emma Robertson. With special mention to Caleb Nichols-Mansell for his love and support.

The Music

Music is one powerful force in Estherโ€™s story โ€“ as I wrote the novel, to better โ€˜hearโ€™ and โ€˜seeโ€™ what she was hearing and seeing, I made playlists. Upon publication I made the playlists public.
Itโ€™s been nothing short of an electric-shock thrill to hear from readers how much they enjoy being able to listen with Esther too.

Eivรธr

Eivรธr Pรกlsdรณttir, known as Eivรธr, is a beloved Faroese singer-songwriter, artist and actress. Born and raised in Syรฐrugรธta, she had her first televised performance at the age of thirteen. Over the course of her decades-long career, her musical output has spanned a wide range of genres such as folk, art pop, jazz, folk rock, classical and electronica. Her song, Trรธllabundin, is an important part of Esther Wildingโ€™s story. Watch Eivรธr perform it live at the base of Kรณpakonan in the video below.

Two women smiling and laughing in front of a colorful mural. One woman holds a book titled 'The Seven Skins of Esther Wullow' by Holly Ringland.

In 2024 I had the joy of meeting Eivรธr in Camden before she performed at Electric Ballroom. She was glorious to chat with as a human, and an otherworldly angel of music when she performed.
If you ever have the chance to see her live, run, donโ€™t walk.

The Fairytales

Esther and Auraโ€™s story wouldnโ€™t be what it is without the fairy tales of Helena Nyblom, (1843 โ€“ 1926). A Danish-Swedish writer, poet, playwright, cultural critic and pianist, now best remembered for her fairy tales.

I first came to Nyblom through reading her fairy tale, All the Wild Waves. My obsession was immediate. What followed was my rapturous discovery of her stories: swan skins, sea kings and memory-robbing flowers, girls listening to water, old magic and danger hiding entwined in plain sight. And how much more about womenโ€™s experiences was moving beneath these motifs and symbols. 

Nyblom was not a campaigning feminist in the public sense. Scholars have written about the central conflict in her life and work as one between duty and freedom, between the desire to make art and the expectations placed on her as a wife and mother. That tension is everywhere in her fairy tales.

When I had the idea that Estherโ€™s missing sister Aura made sense of her world through fairy tales, I immediately knew they would be Helena Nyblomโ€™s. 

Svanhamnen: Nyblomโ€™s rework of the old swan-maiden story. In many versions of the tale, a man hides a womanโ€™s swan skin and traps her into marriage. Nyblom shifts the focus. The man is not the centre. The woman is. Caught in marriage and duty. Then she finds her swan skin again. And flies. That exhalation I felt as I read that freedom on the page floored me.

Agneta and the Lake King: Nyblom returns to water, enchantment and captivity reworking this old tale. Agneta is seduced and taken below the water by the Lake King to live in his underwater kingdom. She becomes wife, queen, mother. But the sound of bells from the world above reaches her through the water and wakes something in her. Memory. Land. Family. Self. Again, she is a woman caught between worlds. Again, there is beauty and danger tangled together. Again, there is the question of what a woman has to forget in order to belong somewhere she did not freely choose.

All the Wild Waves of the Sea: one of the sharpest fairy tales Iโ€™ve ever read, again about water. Violanta lives with her mother and brother in a cottage high on a mountainside. Their life is safe, lovely, enclosed. But far away she can see the sea. And nearby, she watches the brook that runs toward it. Violanta longs to see the wild waves. She is haunted by curiosity. Hunger. A wish for a life larger than the one she has been given. So she dares. Follows her heart. Refuses to settle. And is destroyed by the very waves she longed for. It is brutal. It feels like an ancient, scathing warning dressed as a fairy tale: this is what happens to a girl who wants too much. But I still donโ€™t think the warning is the most powerful part of the story. The longing is.

This is what drew me to Nyblom โ€“ the way freedom, rage, longing, desire and curiosity are hidden inside her fairy tales. Waiting.

When I couldnโ€™t find an English translation anywhere in the world or on the internet of Svanhamnen, I enlisted the talents of Malin ร–brell to translate it for me, which I share with you for your reading pleasure.



Black-and-white portrait of a woman with a side bun hairstyle, wearing a dress with lace detailing and decorative pins, and a necklace with a pendant.

Helena Nyblom - Wikipedia

Read Helena Nyblomโ€™s fairy tales:

Black and white illustration of a woman in profile, wearing a floral-patterned dress, with her hair in a braid, standing in front of a plain background with falling leaves.
A black and white sketch of a mythological scene with a large figure of a woman with long, flowing hair, her back to the viewer, and fish swimming around her. The scene is divided into three panels, with the middle panel showing the woman touching a tree that has flowers and a hanging heart-shaped object. The top of the drawing is labeled "JOHN BAUER 1910."
A black and white drawing of a woman with long flowing hair standing in the sea, with waves around her and large rocks nearby. She has wings and is facing to the right, with mountains in the background.

The Cake

Since Esther Wilding was published in 2022, I have been astonished and delighted to see readers baking their own versions of Estherโ€™s Aunt Erinโ€™s โ€˜painted cakeโ€™, which she bakes in my novel to conjure love.

My inspiration was a 17th century Italian fairytale about painted bread, and Bromaโ€™s recipe for Persian Love Cake โ€“ opposite.

Click to get the recipe that inspired me, or click below to read the backstory of how this cake in Estherโ€™s life came to be.

My wholehearted thanks to every reader whoโ€™s shared their painted cake with me.

The Art

Throughout Estherโ€™s life, she is haunted and guided by art.
These are some of the artists that shape her story.


John Bauer

John Bauer (4 June 1882 โ€“ 20 November 1918) was a Swedish painter and illustrator. He is best known for his illustrations for early editions of Bland tomtar och troll (Among Gnomes and Trolls), an anthology of Swedish folklore and fairy tales first published in 1907. Bauer illustrated several stories by Helena Nyblom, including Svanhamnen, her tale of swan maidens and longing, and Agneta and the Sea King, with its girl, its water, and its old mythic pull, both pictured.

In November 1918, Bauer, his wife, the artist Ester Ellqvist, and their three-year-old son Bengt drowned aboard the steamer Per Brahe crossing Lake Vรคttern in southern Sweden.

Four years later, during the salvage of Per Brahe in the summer of 1922, the small lakeside town of Hรคstholmen reportedly filled with crowds. When the shipโ€™s mast rose again above the water, thousands gathered to witness it. Even allowing for exaggeration in the reported numbers, the scene speaks to how deeply the tragedy had entered public imagination: the fairy-tale artist, his artist wife and their small child, lost to the dark water of a Swedish lake.

A vintage sketch showing a nude woman with long hair and jewelry, leaning against a horse with a flower branch on its head. The depiction is labeled 'John Bauer 1910' in the top left corner.

Illustration from Helena Nyblomโ€™s Agneta and the Sea King โ€“ John Bauer, 1910. Image courtesy of Uppsala Auktionskammare.

A woman in a black dress with gold embroidery, standing in profile. She has blonde hair and is on a field with three flying swans in the sky.

Illustration from Helena Nyblomโ€™s Svanhamnen โ€“ John Bauer.

Hilma af Klint

Hilma af Klint (1862โ€“1944) is now celebrated as one of Swedenโ€™s most visionary artists. Graduating with honours in 1887 from Stockholmโ€™s Royal Academy of Fine Arts, af Klint was recognised as a naturalistic painter. But in 1906 she took a radically different path, one shaped by spiritualism, science, geometry, colour, the natural world and unseen forces. Between 1906 and 1915, she created The Paintings for the Temple, a monumental cycle of 193 works.

She rarely showed these paintings while she was alive. Instead, she protected them for the future, leaving instructions that some of her most important work should not be seen until twenty years after her death. Even then, the world was slow to catch up. Her paintings remained largely unseen until 1986, forty-two years after she died.

Today, Hilma af Klint is celebrated all over the world: an artist who trusted her vision enough to leave it waiting in the dark, until the world was ready for its light.

An art gallery with abstract colorful paintings on the wall. A person with brown hair, wearing a dark red top and teal skirt, is observing the artwork.

Me, standing in utter awe at the Hilma af Klint exhibition, Guggenheim Museum, NYC, 2019.

Painting of a white heron with a long neck, standing on a black and white surface, with its reflection visible in water. The background is divided into black on top and white on bottom.

Hans Pauli Olsen

Hans Pauli Olsen is a Danish/Faroese sculptor, born in Tรณrshavn in 1957, whose work lives in galleries as much as it does the infamous weather of the Faroe Islands.

His sculptures can be found across the islands, especially in Tรณrshavn. Listasavn Fรธroya, the National Gallery of the Faroe Islands, holds several of his works, including two that bear great meaning in Estherโ€™s story: Reflection (Spegilsmynd), a four-metre bronze sculpture. In it, the figure of a pregnant woman is mirrored, as though in water or dream. The gallery describes the sculpture as both magical and strongly physical, shaped by the visible marks of Olsenโ€™s hands in clay.

Olsen also created Kรณpakonan, the bronze and stainless-steel statue of the Seal Woman on the shore at Mikladalur, on the island of Kalsoy. The sculpture gives form to one of the Faroe Islandsโ€™ most famous legends: the seal woman who comes ashore, removes her skin and becomes human until sunrise. The statue stands on a rocky knoll by the sea, where the Atlantic weather is part of the work. Engineers calculated that she needed to withstand waves up to thirteen metres high. One of the scenes I found the most moving to write in Estherโ€™s story takes place here.

Bronze statue of a woman positioned on rocks by the ocean, with green cliffs and a cloudy sky in the background.
A bronze sculpture of a human figure standing upright on a pedestal outdoors, surrounded by green trees.

Charles Folkard

Charles James Folkard was a British illustrator and comic artist whose work moved between fairy tale, childrenโ€™s books, humour and enchantment.

In 1912, he illustrated Helena Nyblomโ€™s Jolly Calle & Other Swedish Fairy Tales. The collection carried Nyblomโ€™s Swedish fairy tales into English, accompanied by Folkardโ€™s strange, delicate images.

I picked up my copy in 2009 at a book market on Oxford Road in Manchester, England. It went on to my bookshelf and stayed there until 2018. When I took it down to read after finishing writing Alice Hart. Among the stories is All the Wild Waves of the Sea โ€“ the first of Nyblomโ€™s work I read, and which, immediately upon reading it, became the foundation of Esther Wildingโ€™s story.

A woman with long flowing hair wearing a patterned dress stands in ocean water near rocks, reaching out towards the sea during sunset or sunrise.

Courtesy of the estate of Charles Folkard.

For your book club!

A hardcover book titled "The Seven Skins of Esther Wilder" by Holly Ringland, featuring an illustrated floral and animal design with moths, coral, and marine life on the cover and edges.

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

*Between nibblies, wine, thick slabs of Aunt Erinโ€™s Painted Cake, and much cackling!

Ready to meet Esther Wilding?

Australia

New Zealand

UK

Canada

USA

To find The Seven Skins of Esther Wilding published in your language, please check with your favourite local bookshop.