Home
/
Fiction
/
Elizabeth Alone
Elizabeth Alone
Nov 13, 2025 10:40 AM

Author:William Trevor

Elizabeth Alone

Elizabeth Alone by William Trevor - a powerful and moving novel from one of the world's finest writers

After nineteen years of marriage, three children and a brief but passionate affair followed by a quick divorce, Elizabeth Aidallbery has to go to hospital for an emergency operation. From her hospital bed she has the leisure to take stock of her life, and frankly it doesn't look very edifying: there's the 17 year old daughter who's run off to a commune with her boyfriend; an old hopeless suitor who continues to press his claims; and of course the memory of the havoc she caused by the affair.

No doubt she could put her life back in order. But need that involve all those people who cause her so much heartache?

Readers of Love and Summer and Felicia's Journey will be delighted by Elizabeth Alone. It will also be enjoyed by readers of Colm Toibin and William Boyd.

'A finely observed, gently sensitive comedy, delightful to read' Daily Telegraph

'Trevor is a master of both language and storytelling' Hilary Mantel

William Trevor was born in Mitchelstown, County Cork, in 1928, and was educated at Trinity College, Dublin. He has lived in England for many years. The author of numerous acclaimed collections of short stories and novels, he has won many awards including the Whitbread Book of the Year, The James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Sunday Times Award for Literary Excellence. He has been shortlisted three times for the Booker Prize: in 1976 with his novel The Children of Dynmouth, in 1991 with Reading Turgenev and in 2002 with The Story of Lucy Gault. He recently received the prestigious David Cohen Literature Prize in recognition of a lifetime's literary achievement.

Reviews

Shingle Street is a bravura performance that’s also solid and heartfelt

—— Carol Rumens , Observer

A good, fresh performance to make a comeback with

—— Derwent May , Standpoint

Blake Morrison’s poetry glints like a river seen through the mud

—— Michael Conaghan , Belfast Telegraph Morning

These are humane poems, skillful, conversational, delicate and more complex than they at first appear

—— Rory Waterman , The Times Literary Supplement

Good poetry is rare, and Blake Morrison’s…Shingle Street is the real thing. I keep going back to these poems, and enjoy them more each time

—— Claire Tomalin , Week

Bewitching ...A prose stylist of quite outstanding talent with a gift for psychological acuity and an ability to encapsulate the human condition...As a writer, she is the real thing, utterly authentic in motive and achievement

—— Guardian

A lovely, subtly teasing writer...Hadley's observations of the ebb and flow of female desire and frustration are reminiscent of Virginia Woolf, but she taps sensual undercurrents where Woolf wouldn't have dipped her toe

—— New York Times

charming, sweet...there is a singing simplicity that cuts through to the heart of things...fresh and touching

—— Sunday Times

[A] delightful debut novel

—— Mail on Sunday

Beautifully written...a powerfully moving account.

—— Sunday Express

Picked as one of the hot authors to watch in 2015.

—— The Times

A sweet, redemptive message ...Etta's trek as she comes to the end of her life and reckons with the past, has a real and worthwhile dignity to it.

—— Financial Times

There's a huge buzz around this debut novel.

—— Red Online

Canadian Emma Hooper is sure to be 2015's face of literary quirk.

—— Grazia

The friends' life stories unfold in beautifully written, bite-sized chapters that ebb and flow between past and present like the sea Etta is seeking. Unusual, touching and utterly memorable.

—— Choice Magazine

An irresistibly enchanting debut novel

—— Booklist

Hooper, with great insight, explores the interactions and connections between spouses and friends - the rivalries, the camaraderie, the joys and tragedies - and reveals the extraordinary lengths to which people will go in the name of love.

—— Publishers Weekly

This is a quietly powerful story whose dreamlike quality lingers long after the last page is turned.

—— Library Journal Review

Magical... such wonderfully assured storytelling: it's been a very long time since a book has taken me by the hand - and the heart - as this one has.

—— Sarah Winman (international bestselling author of When God Was a Rabbit)

Etta and Otto and Russell and James by Emma Hooper is incredibly moving, beautifully written and luminous with wisdom. It is a book that restores one's faith in life even as it deepens its mystery. Wonderful!

—— Chris Cleave

Close’s wry wit and deadpan delivery...make this debut novel a treat to read. . . . An original confection with echoes of The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing and a dollop of Sex and the City

—— Shelf Awareness

Jennifer Close’s debut, Girls in White Dresses, follows a group of young women doing all the things they know they shouldn’t—falling for one’s boss, dating gay men—all while drinking far too many mimosas at other people’s weddings

—— Vogue.com

Funny... These stories will resonate with readers in the throes of the quarter-life churn

—— Publishers Weekly

What a delight! The young women in this hugely appealing book are charming, funny, rueful, poignant - just like their creator, in other words, one of the freshest and most appealing new voices in fiction. I can't wait for more work from Jennifer Close

—— Ann Packer, bestselling author of The Dive from Clausen’s Pier and Swim Back to Me

The only way to express my love for Girls in White Dresses by Jennifer Close is to tell you that this is the one book that I will be recommending over and over again to all of my friends. I laughed, I cried, I nodded knowingly as the characters waded their way through the hits and misses of their twenties and thirties. I can't remember the last time I loved a book as much as this one

—— Allison Winn Scotch, New York Times bestselling author of 'The One That I Want' and 'Time of My Life'

Girls In White Dresses is a dark, funny, intimate romp through boyfriends, first apartments, and great friendships - but beneath the surface lurks the jealousy, disappointment, and love that didn't quite end up the way you thought it would. Jennifer Close's brilliant, deadpan humor made me laugh so hard my own roommate thought I was nuts

—— Margot Berwin, author of Hothouse Flower

Girls in White Dresses is about a group of smart, funny, unapologetically grouchy, always-hungover female friends who kvetch their way through one another's weddings and showers, stare blearily at one another's offspring, sometimes barely tolerate one another's men, but nonetheless have one another's backs through thick and thin. Jennifer Close has written an unsentimental, frank novel about female friendship - its lifelong loyalties and unconditional love

—— Kate Christensen, PEN/Faulkner Award-winning author of 'The Great Man' and 'The Astral'

I recently read a book which explores the same post-university landscape that Girls handles; Jennifer Close's Girls In White Dresses. Like Girls, it is often funny, moving and true to (my and other straight women of a certain age living in a big city) life

—— Bim Adewunmi , Guardian

Delightful… Sharply and sparely written … a great debut

—— Wendy Holden , Daily Mail, Books of the Year

A quiet sense of emotional tragedy, sharp observational humour and writing so economically precise you long to read every sentence twice

—— Huffington Post

Perfects the intimate, easy style that makes reading her such a pleasure

—— Claire Allfree , Metro

The worlds she creates are so absorbing and believable; she taps into our innate curiosity about people just like ourselves

—— Sophie White , Sunday Independent

What she does, in the course of this novel, is show that the simplest family stories often have complex roots and unlikely outcomes. This is a book full of surprises, and Tyler is adept at the great revelation that both startles and throws what has come before into a whole new light

—— Erica Wagner , Financial Times

A warm, wise and funny book

—— Candis

A believable and wise read

—— Joanne Finney , Good Housekeeping

The texture of everyday experience transmuted into art

—— Kirkus Review

[A] wonderful book

—— Elspeth Barker , Literary Review

When it comes to painting a loving, funny and yet never simplistic portrait of American family life, Anne Tyler is, and always has been, the great mistress

—— Erica Wagner , Financial Times

There is no limit to the superlatives that Tyler inspires

—— Eileen Battersby , Irish Times

With A Spool of Blue Thread, the Pulitzer Prize winning novelist is on typically fine form

—— Jennifer Lipman , Optima Magazine

Sincerely and carefully told

—— Angus Sutherland, 5 stars , Skinny

This is a book that explores moral and psychological ambiguities with extraordinary subtlety

—— Caroline Moore , Oldie

Deftly written with skilful characterisation... A master of conversation

—— Vanessa Berridge , Daily Express

A Spool of Blue Thread does an exquisite job

—— Leo Robson , New Statesman

This is a novel to cherish

—— MediaCity

Wonderful new novel

—— 5 stars , Western Mail

A truly delightful read

—— Rachael Roberts , Big Issue

Ms. Tyler has a knack for turning sitcom situations into something far deeper and more moving

—— Rebecca Pepper Sinkler , International New York Times

A moving, well-crafted reflection on life and death and the relationships that sustain us through both

—— Sarah Gilmartin , Sunday Business Post

How can it be so wonderful!... Tyler remains among the best chroniclers of family life

—— Washington Post

Astonishingly adept

—— Leo Robson , New Statesman

Tyler describes so accurately the frailties, turmoil and love of family life

—— Big Issue

No one does family sagas quite like Anne Tyler

—— Matilda Bathurst , Country Life

Mundane yet magical, thus pure Tyler

—— Markie Robson-Scott , Tablet

Anne Tyler paints a large-scale portrait on a small-scale canvas and does it beautifully

—— Good Book Guide

In many ways this novel is a culmination of all those that have gone before it; it combines a multitude of themes and never fails to exact humour alongside the more sombre task of delving into topical issues such as sexuality, relationships and ageing

—— Francesa Wilson , Gryphon

Absolutely wonderful, a work of genius

—— Gill Hornby , Lady

It's so rich in detail and reality, so simple, but so compelling. I wept

—— Victoria Hislop , Waitrose Weekend

Is as good as anything she has ever written

—— Razia Iqbal , Independent

Another insightful study of family life. It may be familiar territory for the writer, but she commands it absolutely

—— Neville Hawcock , Financial Times

One to read on a family holiday

—— Fiona Wilson , The Times

Her gift for producing what seems less like fiction than actuality works wonders

—— Peter Kemp , Sunday Times Ireland

Heartwarming

—— Four stars , Love it!

Highly reccommended

—— Fiona Atley , Nudge

May be her best yet, though, to be honest, this is what I always tend to say after reading the latest Anne Tyler.

—— Craig Brown , Mail on Sunday

Superbly accomplished, perceptive and funny, tugged forward by suspended revelations to its hurricane climax

—— Robert McCrum , Observer

[Tyler] writes so sparingly and yet her books are dense with the complexities of human emotions

—— Natasha Harding, Jessica Fellowes , The Sun

Pure pleasure

—— Mark Amory , Spectator

[Tyler] has the rapier wit of a true satirist

—— Molly Guiness , Spectator

Anne Tyler is a magician: what she does seems so simple and et it weaves a compelling spell

—— D O'D , RTE Guide

Utterly absorbing, heartbreaking and endearing

—— Best

Tyler explores the simmering resentment that often underpins familial relationships, as well as the elusive nature of the American Dream

—— Paul Nolan , Hot Press

A book that is shot through with random misfortune, but which takes infinite pleasure in the detail of everyday family life.

—— Daisy Goodwin , Daily Mail

Rivalries flare between siblings and secrets unravel, as Tyler shines a brilliant light on our fundamental relationships and the span of life.

—— Sainsbury’s Magazine

Since the characters are actual, flawed human beings, it makes the story unbelievably relatable.

—— Emmy Griffiths , So Feminine

One of the greatest storytellers alive, whose characters arrive on the page like human beings, things happen to them, they react to these things, and then life continues

—— John Boyne , Irish Times

A stunning novel about three generations of a family that perfectly captures the fights, petty irritations and deep connections between them

—— Good Housekeeping

A rich and perceptive examination of uneven family relationships

—— Yorkshire Post
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.zzdbook.com All Rights Reserved