A beautiful hardback edition of the collected stories of one of the best short-story writers ever, with a new introduction by John Banville.
Elizabeth Bowen was born in Dublin in 1899, the only child of an
Irish lawyer and landowner. She was educated at Downe House School
in Kent. Her book Bowen's Court (1942) is the history of her family
and their house in County Cork, and Seven Winters (1943) contains
reminiscences of her Dublin childhood. In 1923 she married Alan
Cameron, who held an appointment with the BBC and who died in 1952.
She travelled a good deal, dividing most of her time between London
and Bowen's Court, which she inherited.
Elizabeth Bowen is considered by many to be one of the most
distinguished novelists of the twentieth century. Her first book, a
collection of short stories, Encounters, appeared in 1923, followed
by another, Ann Lee's, in 1926. The Hotel (1927) was her first
novel, and was followed by The Last September (1929), Joining
Charles (1929), another book of short stories, Friends and
Relations (1931), To the North (1932), The Cat Jumps (short
stories, 1934), The House in Paris (1935), The Death of the Heart
(1938), Look at All Those Roses (short stories, 1941), The Demon
Lover (short stories, 1945), The Heat of the Day (1949), Collected
Impressions (essays, 1950), The Shelborne (1951), A World of Love
(1955), A Time in Rome (1960), Afterthought (essays, 1962), The
Little Girls (1964), A Day in the Dark (1965) and her last book Eva
Trout (1969).
She was awarded the CBE in 1948, and received honorary degrees from
Trinity College, Dublin in 1949, and from Oxford University in
1956. In the same year she was appointed Lacy Martin Donnelly
Fellow at Bryn Mawr College in the United States. The Royal Society
of Literature made her a Companion of Literature in 1965. Elizabeth
Bowen died in 1973.
She is a major writer; her name should appear on any responsible
list of the ten most important fiction writers in English on this
side of the Atlantic in this century. She is what happened after
Bloomsbury ... the link that connects Virginia Woolf with Irish
Murdoch and Muriel Spark.
*Victoria Glendinning*
Bowen's stories show the awesome capabilities of the English
language and the surprise and mystery of the human soul.
*Anne Tyler*
Bowen's stories are novels that have been split open like rocks and
reveal the glitter of the naked crystals which have formed
them.
*V. S. Pritchett*
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