The Correspondent
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Description
I was delighted and moved . . .
Evans does an expert job at making you root for [Sybil] even as you want to give her a timeout . . .
Masterful
I was delighted and moved . . .
Evans does an expert job at making you root for [Sybil] even as you want to give her a timeout . . .
Masterful
This is the novel I'm giving to everyone for Christmas...
The Correspondent
is
a delight
: melancholy without being sentimental, warm without being cosy, witty without being silly... The
comparisons to Strout are accurate
but this novel also
reminded me of Anne Tyler's ability to make the domestic dramatic
... An ode to a dying art form, and
proof that your life is never too decided to make a change.
A warm, funny gem of a novel
. . . It’s a clever conceit, which Virginia Evans uses to great effect in a novel that is melancholic without being sentimental.
One for fans of Elizabeth Strout.
Subtly told and finely made
,
The Correspondent
is a portrait of a small life expanding. Virginia Evans shows how one woman changes at a point when change had seemed impossible. That change, like this novel, turns out to be
a cause for celebration
‘
A masterclass
in how to put words on human frailty. This debut
does not put a foot wrong. Smart and clever . . .
Evans is
a confident, competent author in whom we can trust’
I can't praise it enough
. Sybil is such a wonderful character, and the supporting cast so vivid and real. For a book about grief and regret it is also
properly funny
. It's an
absolute triumph
Open-hearted with some, a hedgehog curled tight in a ball with others,
I cried more than once as I witnessed this brilliant woman come to understand herself more deeply
and risk lowering her defences. Both serious and uplifting, in
The Correspondent
, Virginia Evans shows us
what a glorious thing growing older can be
This novel is
a complete and utter joy.
I'm kind of speechless at how good this was.
How
unexpectedly perfect and profoundly moving.
It is so rare that a novel surprises you, but this one certainly did. I loved it. Felt cradled by it. Moved, and hurt, and healed.
It’s a masterclass in the passage of time
, in showing, not telling. In humility and redemption and how to love. I couldn’t look away. It is genius. It is tender. It has left me bruised, and grateful, and in tears.
One of my best reads of the year.
Beautiful. A
quietly brilliant
debut that I didn’t want to put down. Sybil is one of the most
rounded, real, fascinating
characters I've read in a long time.
Virginia Evans
is from the East Coast of the United States. She attended James Madison University for her bachelor’s in English literature. After starting a family, she went back to school for her master’s of philosophy in creative writing at Trinity College in Dublin, Ireland, where she studied under tutors including Claire Keegan and Kevin Power. She now lives in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, with her husband, Mark, two children, Jack and Mae, and her Red Labrador, Brigid.