The Chosen: who pays the price of a writer's fame? - book cover
  • Publisher : riverrun
  • Published : 14 Apr 2022
  • Pages : 0
  • ISBN-10 : 1529410681
  • ISBN-13 : 9781529410686
  • Language : English

The Chosen: who pays the price of a writer's fame?

'Does art enhance life, or negate it? The painful question runs through Lowry's portrait of Thomas Hardy, and produces a sombre, delicate novel, finely judged and full of insight' Hilary Mantel


One Wednesday morning in November 1912 the ageing Thomas Hardy, entombed by paper and books and increasingly estranged from his wife Emma, finds her dying in her bedroom. Between his speaking to her and taking her in his arms, she has gone.

The day before, he and Emma had exchanged bitter words - leading Hardy to wonder whether all husbands and wives end up as enemies to each other. His family and Florence Dugdale, the much younger woman with whom he has been in a relationship, assume that he will be happy and relieved to be set free. But he is left shattered by the loss.

Hardy's bewilderment only increases when, sorting through Emma's effects, he comes across a set of diaries that she had secretly kept about their life together, ominously titled 'What I Think of My Husband'. He discovers what Emma had truly felt - that he had been cold, remote and incapable of ordinary human affection, and had kept her childless, a virtual prisoner for forty years. Why did they ever marry?

He is consumed by something worse than grief: a chaos in which all his certainties have been obliterated. He has to re-evaluate himself, and reimagine his unhappy wife as she was when they first met.

Hardy's pained reflections on the choices he has made, and must now make, form a unique combination of love story and ghost story, by turns tender, surprising, comic and true. The Chosen - the extraordinary new novel by Elizabeth Lowry - hauntingly searches the unknowable spaces between man and wife; memory and regret; life and art.

Readers Top Reviews

Bookman70
I'm afraid I couldn't get on with this book and gave up halfway through-very unusual for me. I found that the prose style was not to my taste. The book has had good reviews by many so I'm willing to accept that the fault is mine. Sorry.
JonC
This had me hooked . Always convincing, engaging and sympathetic, the exploration of the agony of Hardy’s marriage, loss and suffering was written with sensitive detail and empathy. Echoes of his poems throughout.
GG
This isn’t a full review, but for those who know a reasonable amount about Hardy’s life and his switch to writing poetry it is a fascinating, plausible, deeply inquisitive portrayal of his life and the shock of Emma’s death. Beautifully written in language and detail.