Eleven Letters to You
By (Author) Helen Elliott
Text Publishing
The Text Publishing Company
16th May 2023
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Autobiography: writers
Paperback
304
Width 155mm, Height 233mm, Spine 20mm
360g
Helen Elliotts Eleven Letters to You is a profoundly original memoir, an intimate account of growing up in the suburbs of Melbourne in the fifties and sixties, before feminism.
This sparkling, wonderfully absorbing book is written in the form of eleven letters to those neighbours, relatives, friends, teachers and mentors who shaped the young Helen. (It begins in 1950 when she is three and finishes in 1969 when she is twenty-two.) Each of the letters is a homage to the power of memory to recreate life in all its sensuous and indelible detail. And each is a love letter that brings Elliotts marvellous charactersthe Misses Stapley, Lois, Mr Cohen and so onback to life, along with the lost worlds they inhabit.
Helen Elliott sets out to look for answers to one primary question: how did she become whoever she thought she was. She conducts her search through the lives of others. I am not the centre of this book, she says, but the hinge holding it together.
Her search will mesmerise her readers, because of the power and fluency of her voice, and because the vanished kitchens and gardens and fields and streets she conjures up are so unforgettably drawn.
Eleven Letters for You offers us an immersive and deeply moving reading experience. It will appeal equally to fans of Elena Ferrante and Helen Garner.
A quietly ecstatic work of memoryintense, witty and beautiful. * Helen Garner *
A rare feat of imagination and memory, written with grace and humour, irony and controlled anger, summoning the encounters that gave Helen Elliott treasures of human knowledge and surprises of self-awareness. * Brenda Niall *
A deeply evocative memoir, with the humanity of A. B. Faceys classic, A Fortunate Life, written on the little piece of ivory favoured by Jane Austen. * Louise Adler *
Helen Elliott is a prominent literary critic, and the editor of Grandmothers. Her writing has appeared in the Monthly, the Australian, the Age, Griffith Review and numerous other publications. She was the literary editor of the Herald Sun and has four granddaughters.