Dear Evelyn
By (Author) Kathy Page
Biblioasis
Biblioasis
1st December 2018
Canada
General
Fiction
823.92
Paperback
328
A portrait of a turbulent and beautiful seventy-year-long marriage forged during the onset of World War II.
Born in the 1920s on a working-class London street, Harry Miles wins a scholarship and grows into adulthood as a sensitive man, torn between his love for poetry and the immediate demands of the world around him. When he marries the magnetic and demanding Evelyn amongst the outbreak of war, his capacity to love is increasingly testedup to and beyond when she abandons him on the cusp of death.
An unconventional love story, harrowing and deeply tender, Dear Evelyn studies two people who permanently shape each other over a shared lifetime.
Praise for Dear Evelyn
"Kathy Page's Dear Evelyn is a novel in the shape of a life...[true] to most human experiences of love...Page has laid bare the lives of her characters, making no claim to their significance to anyone but each other, and in doing so has demonstrated that the ordinary is infinitely precious."
--Times Literary Supplement
Quietly hums with emotional charge. The war years, with Harry fighting in North Africa and Evelyn struggling with a young child at home, are especially vivid, but this watchful, empathetic chronicle retains sensitivity through the less obviously eventful decades of home-building and child-rearing....Page's watchful and very British tale remains devoted to both and forgiving to the end. A searching, and touching, depiction of the places where married lives merge and the places where they never do."
--Kirkus (starred review)
"Kathy Page's Dear Evelyn tells the tender and unsettling story of working-class Londoner Harry Miles and the ambitious Evelyn Hill who fall in love as the world around them goes to war. What initially begins as a familiar wartime love story morphs into a startling tale of time's impact on love and family, as well as one's complex search for personal meaning and truth. By integrating themes that are universally understood by readers and skillfully crafting endearing characters that surprise and delight, Page has created a poignant literary work of art. The result is a timeless page-turning masterpiece."
--Rogers Writers' Trust Fiction Prize jury citation
"Personal and intimate in focus, preoccupied with the minutiae of love and the domestic. What this painstaking and painful account of a marriage - from passionate beginning to resentful, grubby end--relies on, as much as its period detail, is its precise ruminations on the nature of affection and resentment, and on how love can persist in the face of cruelty...This becomes a novel of sadness about love and its waste, and about the humiliation of aging. It made me cry my eyes out."
--Globe and Mail
"No work of fiction has ever moved me to tears. These pages so emotionally swept me away that, at one particularly heartbreaking point, the book felt so alive that it might wound me, and I launched the thing across the room. Dear Evelyn trembles with what Walter Benjamin might call an "aura" of authenticity, deeply felt and rooted in the author's obvious love for literature and her family. The result is a profoundly moving novel that captures the deep melancholy and fundamental loneliness of the human condition with startling emotional acuity."
--Literary Review of Canada
"A love story, a coming-of-age story, and a brilliantly evocative sketch of Britain in the 20th century...[a] measured, intelligent novel."
--The Guardian
"Page's finely wrought story--by turns tender, acid, and poignant--reminds us that marriage is a condition as infinitely variable as the individuals who enter into it...gains dimension and complexity as additional details accumulate through Page's deft use of flashbacks and prolepsis; her precise and graceful prose gives the emerging picture nuance and shading ... Page's touching novel makes the ordinary extraordinary."
--Quill & Quire (starred review)
"An ambitious, and highly literary, historical fiction outing ... The writing is remarkable, masterfully weaving together the personal and the political. The backdrop of global conflict infuses the story with urgency, drama, and the exotic appeal of foreign travel, while the intimate maneuverings of the characters oscillate between tenderness and profound despair."
--Toronto Star
"A smartly written portrait of a marriage that is true to life, has depth and detail, and is sometimes sweet and sometimes painful ... the characters linger long afterwards and are likely to leave readers with either a tear in their eye or a lump in the throat."
--Winnipeg Free Press
"The detail, the nuance, and the vitality of the scenes, while disconcerting, is also supremely detailed but never overwhelming with pages of minutia...Harry and Evelyn come together for an instant, repel one another over this or that, strive to find their better selves and their compassion and their once rich love; and then, with a harsh word or passing mood, they're back to marital warfare. It's a heartbreaking depiction, if only because it's so enduring: these two are bound by family, by obligation, by history, and even by a steady if off-kilter and declining love."
--Vancouver Sun
"Page charts the emotional shifts that take place over the course of their marriage, from first flush of love to old age, with subtlety and sensitivity."
--Booklist
"Though a familiar tale, it's sharply drawn and told with an alertness to cliche ... [T]he concluding scenes, while sadly inevitable, are quietly devastating."
--Daily Mail Online
"I know of no contemporary writer who deals so convincingly with love. Page consistently dramatizes the ways in which the feelings of intimate couples are puzzling mixtures of hope, lust, genuine caring, resentment, politics, and much else...ambitious and profoundly resonant."
--Ormsby Review
"Dear Evelyn has a wonderful, effortless sweep...Page is able to contain a century; two wars; two fully realized, flawed and complicated people; a rich and tumultuous marriage; so much love; and the pride, rage and resentment that keeps so much from ever being properly expressed."
--Kerry Clare, Pickle Me This
"[Page] has flown largely under the radar of publishing journalism while also writing damned good books...Page is a magician at evoking a sense of past-ness, and her characterisation is extraordinarily skillful and tender: both Evelyn and her husband Harry can be extremely difficult, but the reader understands and feels for them both. Exceptional work."
--Elle Thinks
"A beautifully written story about a long marriage with a heart-tugging ending."
--Literary Hoarders
"A richly textured story that feels authentic to each period, without ever getting bogged down in too many details or historical facts ... Relayed with compassion, and incisive writing."
--Gulf Islands Driftwood
"A novel that will fill your heart, and break it, too."
--The Parry Sound
Praise for Kathy Page
--Prairie Fire