Elizabeth Bowen
Elizabeth Dorothea Cole Bowen (
7 June,
1899 â€"
22 February,
1973) was an
Anglo-Irish novelist and short story writer. Bowen was born in
Dublin and later brought to Bowen's Court in
County Cork where she spent her summers. When her father became mentally ill in 1907, she and her mother moved to
England, eventually settling in
Hythe. After her mother died in 1912, Bowen was brought up by her aunts.
She was educated at Downe House. After some time at art school in
London she decided that her talent lay in writing. She mixed with the
Bloomsbury Group, becoming good friends with
Rose Macaulay, who helped her find a publisher for her first book, Encounters (1923). In 1923 she married Alan Cameron, an educational administrator who subsequently worked for the
BBC.
Bowen inherited Bowen's Court in 1930, but remained based in England, making frequent visits to
Ireland. During
World War II she worked for the British Ministry of Information, reporting on Irish opinion, particularly on the issue of Irish neutrality.
Her husband retired in 1952 and they settled in Bowen's Court, where Alan Cameron died a few months later. For years Bowen struggled to keep the house going, lecturing in the
United States to earn money. In 1959 the house was sold and demolished.
Bowen received recognition for her work, being awarded Doctorates in Literature by
Trinity College, Dublin (1949) and the
University of Oxford (1952). She was also awarded the CBE.
After spending some years without a permanent home, Bowen settled in Hythe and died of
cancer in 1972, aged 73. She is buried with her husband in Farahy church yard, close to the gates of Bowen's Court. A commemoration of her life is held annually in Farahy church.
Elizabeth Bowen was greatly interested in ‘life with the lid on' and what happened when lid came off. Her work deals with innocence and betrayal and theirs that lie beneath the veneer of respectability. Her style is highly wrought and owes much to
Henry James. She was also influenced by
Marcel Proust and by the techniques of
Film. Place has a central role in her work. Few have evoked London in wartime as well as she did.
Novels* The Hotel (1927)
* The Last September (1929)
* Friends and Relations ( 1931)
* To the North (1932)
* The House in Paris (1935)
* The Death of the Heart (1936)
* The Heat of the Day (1949)
* A World of Love (1955)
* The Little Girls (1964)
* The Good Tiger (1965)
* Eva Trout (1968)
Short stories* Encounters (1923)
* Joining Charles and Other Stories (1929)
* The Cat Jumps and Other Stories (934)
* Look At All Those Roses (1941)
*
The Demon Lover and Other Stories (1945)
* Stories by Elizabeth Bowen (1959)
* A Day in the Dark and Other Stories (1965)
* The Collected Stories of Elizabeth Bowen (1980)
* Elizabeth Bowen's Irish Stories (1978)
Non-fiction* Bowen's Court (1942)
* Seven Winters: Memories of a Dublin Childhood (1942)
* English Novelists (1942)
* Anthony Trollope: A New Judgement (1946)
* Why Do I Write: An Exchange of Views between Elizabeth Bowen, Graham Greene and V.S. Pritchett (1948)
* Collected Impressions (1950)
* The Shelbourne (1951)
* A Time in Rome (1960)
* Afterthought: Pieces About Writing (1962)
* Pictures and Conversations (1975)
* The Mulberry Tree (1999).
Biography* Victoria Glendinning, Elizabeth Bowen: Portrait of a Writer (1977)
Critical Studies* Hermione Lee, Elizabeth Bowen (1981)
* Phyllis Lassner, Elizabeth Bowen (1990)
* Neil Corcoran, Elizabeth Bowen: The Enforced Return (2004)
*
*
Elizabeth Bowen at Irish Writers Online*
Elizabeth Bowen at the Princess Grace Irish Library*
Literary Encyclopedia biography