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Elizabeth Finch: A novel Hardcover – August 16, 2022


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From the best-selling, award-winning author of The Sense of an Ending, a magnetic tale that centers on the presence of a vivid and particular woman, whose loss becomes the occasion for a man’s deeper examination of love, friendship, and biography.

"I’ll remember Elizabeth Finch when most other characters I’ve met this year have faded." –John Self,
The Times

This beautiful, spare novel of platonic unrequited love springs into being around the singular character of the stoic, exacting Professor Elizabeth Finch. Neil, the narrator, takes her class “Culture and Civilisation,” taught not for undergraduates but for adults of all ages; we are drawn into his intellectual crush on this private, withholding, yet commanding woman. While other personal relationships and even his family drift from Neil’s grasp, Elizabeth’s application of her material to the matter of daily living remains important to him, even after her death, in a way that nothing else does.

In
Elizabeth Finch, we are treated to everything we cherish in Barnes: his eye for the unorthodox forms love can take between two people, a compelling swerve into nonfictional material (this time, through Neil’s obsessive study of Julian the Apostate, following on notes Elizabeth left for him to discover after her death), and the forcefully moving undercurrent of history, and biography in particular, as nourishment and guide in our current lives.

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Popular Highlights in this book

From the Publisher

meet the one and only elizabeth finch

i believe in artifice. and artifice is not incompatible with truth

beware of dreams. also, as a general rule, beware of what most people aspire to

monotheism. monomania. monogamy. monotony. nothing good begins this way.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“[Barnes’s] ambitions expand and contract from novel to novel.” —New York Times
 
“Mr. Barnes has always enjoyed playing with form and style, the porous border between fiction and nonfiction. . . . Over the course of
Elizabeth Finch, Mr. Barnes frequently reminds us of the potency of mythmaking.” —Wall Street Journal

“Elegant. . . . 
Elizabeth Finch is erudite yet accessible.” —Star Tribune

"A lyrical, thoughtful, and intriguing exploration of love, grief, and the collective myths of history. Barnes adds yet another remarkable title to his astoundingly remarkable body of work." —
Booklist

“A novel of ideas . . . with barely a sentence in it that doesn’t have some nutritional value . . . I’ll remember Elizabeth Finch when most other characters I’ve met this year have faded.” —John Self,
The Times (UK)

“A singular tale.” —
Daily Mail (UK)

"Everything Barnes writes changes everything . . . Barnes's latest novel, must be read at least twice for the full force of its voltage to be felt . . . A cryptic crossword of a novel,
Elizabeth Finch is a trickier and even brainier version of Flaubert's Parrot." —Frances Wilson, Oldie
 
"The book's central and most enthralling section . . . deals with a figure Elizabeth Finch esteemed as a kindred spirit: Julian the Apostate . . . A bravura exercise in nimbly handled erudition . . . [
Elizabeth Finch] also celebrates the cast of mind Barnes most prizes. A connoisseur and master of irony himself, he fills this book with instances of its exhilarating power." —Peter Kemp, Sunday Times
 
"
Elizabeth Finch ranks alongside Barnes' best." —Joshua Pugh Ginn, UK Press Syndication
 
"A new novel from Booker Prize winner Julian Barnes is always a literary event, and
Elizabeth Finch . . . is not different. Wistful, thought-provoking stuff." —Sunday Telegraph
 
"This is . . . Julian Barnes . . . in his best ambitious high concept mode, serious and playful at once." —Lindsay Duguid,
Tablet, *Novel of the Week*

About the Author

JULIAN BARNES is the author of twenty-four previous books, for which he has received the Man Booker Prize, the Somerset Maugham Award, the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Prix Médicis and Prix Femina in France, and the Jerusalem Prize. In 2017 he was awarded the Légion d’honneur. His work has been translated into more than forty languages. He lives in London.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Knopf; First Edition (August 16, 2022)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 192 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 059353543X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0593535431
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 11.8 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.81 x 0.8 x 8.52 inches
  • Customer Reviews:

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Customer reviews

3.6 out of 5 stars
3.6 out of 5
916 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2022
“She stood before us, without notes, books, or nerves.”

This is the first sentence of Julian Barnes’s new novel and the introduction of Elizabeth Finch, a writer, and an adult education teacher. “She was, quite simply, the most grown-up person I have met in my life. Perhaps I mean the only grown-up person.” according to her favorite student and the novel’s narrator Neil.

Neil is fascinated by Elizabeth’s persona. Eventually, he persuades her to meet for lunches every few months, and this unusual relationship continues for 20 years, never progressing behind their intellectual meals that follow the established formula. Neal is a failed actor and a failed husband; his children call him “the King of Unfinished Projects.” And yet it seems that Elizabeth Finch will be one “project” he finishes. Thanks to her, he learns about Julian the Apostate, who was the last pagan Roman emperor. After Elizabeth dies, Neal inherits all of her papers, journals, and books. He decides to write about Julian the Apostate, an intriguing ruler who, as much as he tried, couldn’t stop the coming of Christianity. The essay makes part 2 of the novel, about 50 pages. In part 3, he struggles with a question – who was that charismatic woman? Meeting with Elizabeth’s brother and talking to her students, Neal doesn’t learn much, just details he cannot explain. Who was the mysterious man she was seen with? And – surprise! – she was an excellent swimmer although he and other students couldn’t imagine her wearing beachwear.

Recently, I read another novel on a similar subject by another great British writer and Julian Barnes’ friend, Ian McEwan. In his “Lessons’, Miriam, a music teacher, affects the narrator’s life as much as Elizabeth impacts Neal’s. Thanks to Elizabeth, our narrator, being by nature, not an intellectual man, becomes involved in deep research on Julian the Apostate. He doesn’t want to be like people about whom Elizabeth said, “They choose to understand nothing.”

This is a short novel, and with beautiful language, Julian Barnes tells just enough to leave us thinking about a mystery that people present when we try to understand them. Will this book evoke the memory of our favorite teacher? Will it make us reflect on what’s important in life? In any case, we should choose to understand.
21 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on March 7, 2023
Ever since I began reading Barnes many years ago - History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters - I have admired his imagination and great talent. Some of his books resonate more than others, but I found EF to be particularly wonderful.

Perhaps, it was timing. I am now spending far more time reflecting on the past than rising to the temptation of 24/7 stress. With its focus on Medieval history and Julian, EF probably caught me at the “right” time. Other than the brilliantly crafted prose, there are rarely any sharp defining edges in EF. Most of us live in a fog of illusion without reflection. EF beautifully shocks one out of that reverie.

Well done Julian Barnes for tackling subjects that most writers ignore.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2022
The book has three parts. The first part is the narrator’s recollection of Elizabeth Finch, a singular figure who’s made a deep impression on the narrator. The first part is the best, because it delves into the layered interiority of both Elizabeth Finch and the narrator. The second part is the worst and is a dramatic departure from the first. It is essentially an extended essay on a historical figure. Its inclusion was disorienting and displaced the book’s rich fiction with a dry, non-fictional account. The third part of the book, thankfully, reverts back to the fictional.

Ultimately, it was a good book, exploring interesting themes such as the limits and fallibility of historical and personal knowledge. I just wish the second part of the book had been abridged or cut out completely.
9 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 11, 2023
Julian Barnes has given me some of the best reading experiences I have had in the past 20 years, whether it's novels, like "England, England" and "A History of the World in 10 1/2 Chapters" or non-fiction like "Letters From London." Consequently, I eagerly opened "Elizabeth Finch," expecting to find Barnes's characteristic mordant wit and sly insights. Instead the book proved to be one of the worst disappointments I have encountered in years. Much of "Elizabeth Finch" is clearly intended to be a novel of ideas, but most of those ideas do not seem strikingly original in and of themselves (many are of the "Some things are up to us and some are not up to us" variety, which seems a standard chestnut for starting class discussions in a first-year college course), nor are they intriguingly expressed. The plot-driven portion of the novel struck me as even more of a flop. Elizabeth Finch herself is a sketchily-drawn character, and Barnes has conveyed neither the intellectual brilliance nor the force of personality which are supposed to lead the narrator, Neil, to venerate her. The narrator is even more of a nullity. Barnes several times justifies including virtually nothing about Neil's life by having the narrator say, "But this is not my story...." However, since a major focus of the novel is the manner in which his association with Elizabeth Finch affects Neil and enriches his life, Neil cannot be a near-complete vacuum without enough personality to let us see growth and change in him. The only moment in the novel which suggested the old Barnes to me was Elizabeth Finch's clever, droll assertion that Saint Ursula and her followers committed "suicide by cop." I wish the entire book had been written in that vein.
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2024
It is a Julian Barnes book. As such, like what Elizabeth Finch says about herself as a teacher, "is not for everyone." But for patient and curious readers, the book offers many gifts of high intellectual value about history, about life.

Top reviews from other countries

Daniel L. Love
3.0 out of 5 stars Julian Barnes Novel:Elizabeth Finch;Research of Flavius Claudius Julianus
Reviewed in Canada on October 25, 2022
I liked part one,which is a story about Neil's experiences as a mature student in Elizabeth Finch's class in university.

Part two is a compilation of Neil's (Julian Barnes)research about Julian the Apostate. Julian has done someexcellent research on the life and happenings of Flavius Claudius Julianus.

Part three consists of the story after Elizabeth Finch has passed on and Neil has been given access to her box of lecture notes,etc. Neil interviews other people who knew Elizabeth Finch,so that he would be able to discover more details about this amazing woman,whom he stated that,“She was my advisory thunderbolt”。

I recommend all university students to read this book inorder to realize that their professors are human and they have lives too. I also recommend part two of this novel for anyone who will be doing research on Julian the Apostate (Flavius Claudius Julianus。

I gave this novel three stars;although it is subtitled,“A Novel”,it is not a page
turner.
2 people found this helpful
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NAJMUL HOQUE MUNSHI
4.0 out of 5 stars Romantic - Stoic
Reviewed in India on January 30, 2024
Some things are up to us and some things are not up to us.
Dolores
3.0 out of 5 stars I did not like it much
Reviewed in Spain on August 29, 2023
Probably my last Julian Barnes. Did not enjoy much this book.
Ella.
4.0 out of 5 stars Elizabeth Finch
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 2, 2023
This was the book chosen by my book group. We found the structure of the book meant it did not flow easily. The characters were well portrayed but not as well developed as in earlier books by Julian Barnes. So not quite up to expectations.
One person found this helpful
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rodney pyne
5.0 out of 5 stars Is Elizabeth Finch real?
Reviewed in Australia on April 5, 2023
I had difficulty putting this book down. I read it voraciously in less than a day. It's not a long book-less than 200 pages-but it offers the reader so much to digest and think about. It's supposedly about a teacher who makes a lifelong impact on one of her students. EF,the eponymous subject,has a little of the Mary Poppins in her. She's not quite real or normal or human,although we're meant to find her so. She is one of those almost unbelievable people who seem to have life worked out,down pat. She is a woman apart. She doesn't really "belong" anywhere. Yet our narrator makes her the centre of his life -for decades.
To complicate the proceedings,the entire second or middle third of the novel is about the Roman Emperor,Julian "The Apostate",the man who reversed the drift of Rome into Christianity and set about reinstituting the pagan religion/s of old.As we know,he failed,but since the 4th Century AD,thinkers have argued about whether this was a Good or a Bad Thing,including Edward Gibbon,he of The Decline and Fall,who thought it would have been a Good Thing if Christianity had been terminated and Western civilization allowed to develop the glories of Classical thinking.
EF introduces our narrator to this great historical quandary:was Christianity and the influence of The Pale Galilean{Jesus Christ} a Bad Thing in the long run? So,we,the readers,are left to decide if this is a novel about EF or about Classical philosophy and materialism and the longlasting effects of the Enlightenment.
For me,this was simply wonderful reading.Although I'm not sure of whether an EF can really be found among us today,it's exhilirating to ask ourselves some of the big questions about what makes us,in the 21st Century,just who we are. This is a book I will have to read again,,,,,and again.