Elizabeth Bowen (Author)
Elizabeth Bowen was born in Dublin in 1899, the only child of an
Irish lawyer and landowner. She travelled a great deal, dividing
most of her time between London and Bowen's Court, the family house
in County Cork which she inherited. Her first book, a collection of
short stories, Encounters, was published in 1923. The Hotel (1927)
was her first novel. She was awarded the CBE in 1948, and received
honorary degrees from Trinity College, Dublin in 1949, and from
Oxford University in 1956. The Royal Society of Literature made her
a Companion of Literature in 1965. She died in 1973.
Tessa Hadley (Introducer)
Tessa Hadley is the author of eight highly praised novels,
Accidents in the Home, which was longlisted for the Guardian First
Book Award, Everything Will Be All Right, The Master Bedroom, The
London Train, Clever Girl, The Past, Late in the Day, Free Love and
three collections of stories, Sunstroke, Married Love and Bad
Dreams. She won the Windham Campbell Prize for Fiction in 2016, The
Past won the Hawthornden Prize for 2016, and Bad Dreams won the
2018 Edge Hill Short Story Prize. Her stories appear regularly in
the New Yorker.
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
*Vogue*
Like Woolf, like Spark, her language is clear but her effects
complex, creating shimmering reflections of reality, her world
recognisable but just out of reach
*Guardian*
[Bowen's] fiction's uniqueness lies in its versatile, modern
understanding of place as 'inner landscape'... [an] astute
selection of the short stories... [Brown] write[s] fiction with the
texture of history
*London Review of Books*
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