Salt Path author's next book delayed
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Many questions have been asked about The Salt Path, Raynor Winn’s “unflinchingly honest” best-selling memoir, in the past week. Why exactly was the home of Winn and her husband, Moth, in North Wales repossessed?
According to a report in the Mail Online, millionaire banker and cider maker Bill Cole became a fan of Raynor Winn and Moth after reading The Salt Path. After being moved by the back, he got in touch with them without having ever met the pair and invited them to live at his historic farmhouse down in Cornwall.
Penguin Michael Joseph will delay the publication of The Salt Path author Raynor Winn’s next book, On Winter Hill, following an investigation in the Observer over the weekend that suggested her debut was not entirely true.
"The Salt Path" by Raynor Winn is a bestseller in the U.K., but a July 5 newspaper report questioned the truth of her claims in the book
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An investigation by U.K. outlet The Observer has called into question the events of the bestselling non-fiction book that was adapted for the screen starring Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
The author has responded to an investigation challenging the truth behind this bestselling tale of perseverance.
A report in The Observer disputes key aspects of the best-selling memoir billed as an "inspiring and life-affirming true story".
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Raynor Winn has been accused of stealing money and lying after her book became a movie starring Gillian Anderson and Jason Isaacs.
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The Observer on MSNThe real Salt Path: how a blockbuster book and film were spun from lies, deceit and desperationPenniless and homeless, the Winns found fame and fortune with the story of their 630-mile walk to salvation. We can reveal that the truth behind it is very different