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Eva Trout (1968)

av Elizabeth Bowen

MedlemmarRecensionerPopularitetGenomsnittligt betygOmnämnanden
436856,906 (3.21)66
Eva Trout, Elizabeth Bowen’s last novel, epitomizes her bold exploration of the territory between the comedy of manners and cutting social commentary. Orphaned at a young age, Eva has found a home of sorts in Worcestershire with her former schoolteacher, Iseult Arbles, and Iseult's husband, Eric. From a safe distance in London, her legal guardian, Constantine, assumes that all's well. But Eva's flighty, romantic nature hasn't entirely clicked with the Arbles household, and Eva is plotting to escape. When she sets out to hock her Jaguar and disappear without a trace, she unwittingly leaves a paper trail for her various custodians–and all kinds of trouble–to follow.… (mer)
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» Se även 66 omnämnanden

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Eva Trout , o último romance de Elizabeth Bowen, resume sua ousada exploração do território entre a comédia de costumes e o comentário social cortante.

Órfã em tenra idade, Eva encontrou uma espécie de lar em Worcestershire com sua ex-professora, Iseult Arbles, e o marido de Iseult, Eric. De uma distância segura em Londres, seu tutor legal, Constantine, assume que está tudo bem. Mas a natureza volúvel e romântica de Eva não encaixou totalmente na família Arbles, e Eva está planejando escapar. Quando ela decide penhorar seu Jaguar e desaparecer sem deixar rastro, ela involuntariamente deixa um rastro de papel para seus vários guardiões - e todos os tipos de problemas - seguirem.
  bibliotecapresmil | Sep 6, 2022 |
Bowen's finest achievement - Eva Trout is a character for the ages. A heartbreaking love story written in prose so gorgeous it hurts. ( )
  StephenCrome | Oct 13, 2019 |
I picked this book to read because it is on the 1001 Books To Read Before You Die list and I had never read anything by Elizabeth Bowen although she has six books that have been on various versions of the list. Judging by this foray into her ouevre I won't be running out to pick up more of her books.

The eponymous heroine is the orphaned daughter of an immensely wealthy financier. Her mother died when Eva was very young having left her husband to run away with another man and dying in a plane crash in the Andes. Eva's father committed suicide and left Eva (and her fortune) in the care of his friend (and probably lover) Constantine. Before Eva reached the age of majority (twenty-one at that time in the 1950s) she was staying with her former teacher Iseult and Iseult's husband Eric in a cottage in rural England. Eva had adored Iseult when she was in school but close acquaintance seemed to take the shine off that relationship and she spent most of her type with the local vicar's family. Then Eva decided to leave Iseult and Eric and connived with the vicar's son, Henry, to make arrangements to do so. She didn't hide herself very well because first Eric, then Constantine and then Iseult came to visit her at her new abode which was a run down house near the English Channel. When Eva came into her fortune she made various plans for her future including adopting a child. It is hinted that this child was kidnapped but nobody seems at all outraged by this. The child, Jeremy, is deaf and dumb but not stupid. Eva does love him and is quite alarmed when he goes missing for four hours after being picked up from a clay modelling class by someone claiming to be Eva's friend. This causes Eva to decamp to France, telling only Henry where she is. In Fontainebleu Eva learns of a doctor and his wife who specialize in cases like Jeremy's and Eva entrusts Jeremy to their care. The ending, which could have been like a fairytale, is not a surprise since it is foreshadowed quite well.

In the end I found myself mystified by Bowen's aim or message. And I don't really understand why this book is considered so special that it has appeared on all the versions of the list. ( )
  gypsysmom | May 14, 2019 |
Eva Trout was Elizabeth Bowen’s final novel, written when she was around seventy – it was nominated for the Booker prize – then in its second year, and which was finally won by Bernice Rubens for The Elected Member. I liked it very much, the eponymous character is particularly well drawn, reminding me of a slightly older Portia (Death of the Heart). While, Eva Trout is not my favourite Bowen novel, it is a very good, though occasionally challenging read. It is a novel of many themes, parenting, communication, innocence and betrayal among them.

“The way downhill, into the bottomless incredulity which is despair, was incandescent with flowering chestnut trees.”

Eva Trout herself is an enigmatic character, chaotic, often rather child- like, though she is in her twenties when we first meet her. A conspicuously large, awkward girl, unloved and alone. Eva was raised by a succession of nannies and governesses paid for by her wealthy father, following the death of her mother in a plane crash. Now, her father dead too, she awaits full control of her huge inheritance when she is twenty-five. Driving around the countryside in her Jaguar – Eva is a strange mix of vulnerable innocence and trouble.

Eva has difficulty interacting with the world around her, relationships are conducted with a certain amount of drama and misunderstanding. Her legal guardian is Constantine, a former lover of her father’s – who lives in London and dispenses with his duties concerning Eva from there. Eva craves acceptance, and freedom, and as the novel progresses we see Eva moving from place to place in her bid to find them.

Constantine was delighted to approve Eva’s present living arrangements; a paying guest at Larkins, the home of Iseult and Eric Arble, Iseult a former teacher of Eva’s at the second of only two schools she attended. When she was sixteen. Eva had insisted her father pay for her to go to school. The first school she attended was in a castle owned by her father, here her roommate Elsinore attempts suicide, and the school soon closes. Despite having been very fond of Iseult when she was at school, now Eva is less happy living with the Arbles than she had imagined she would be. Seeking refuge from the Arbles, she makes friends the Danceys who live nearby – a clergyman’s family, with whom she spends a lot of time. Their son Henry – several years younger than Eva is her most particular friend, who she involves in her bid for freedom. Unable to wait for her twenty-fifth birthday – just three months away – Eva decides to rent a house in Kent and live entirely by herself. Despite not even knowing how to boil a kettle. On the day she is to take over Cathay – the house she has selected – she is met by Mr Denge the agent, to whom Eva can’t help but display her absolute ignorance of all household matters.

“‘Must we go far? asked his client, as they drove off.
‘No distance!’ sang out the professional optimist. ‘You are not familiar with our part of the world, Miss Trout?’
‘No. That is why.’
‘I see,’ he said, accustomed to doing so. ‘you will find we are rich in associations, not to speak of celebrities past and present. Charles Dickens –’
‘- Yes. Where do I buy a bicycle?
‘Now, immediately?’
‘Yes.’
Mr Denge altered course. ‘And, Miss Trout, groceries? This is your opportunity. I take it you have brought with you your plate and linen? As we pointed out in ours of the 23rd, those you provide. We trust you understood?’
‘No. What are they?’
‘Ha-ha – sheets, and so on. Spoons and, ha-ha, forks.’
‘How should I possess those?’ asked Eva moodily. ‘Must I buy them? Are they very expensive?’”

Once she is installed at Cathay, Eva receives a letter from Henry – and is visited by Eric – whose visit is interrupted by Constantine. Meanwhile Iseult sits at home in the house vacated by Eva, worrying about Eric’s absence. When Eva and Iseult meet again, Eva helps her former teacher to a terrible misunderstanding, which will adversely affect her already fragile marriage.

From here events move forward eight years, years that Eva has spent in America where she bought/adopted a child, (we assume illegally) a boy – Jeremy who is transpires is a deaf mute. Jeremy is now eight years old, able only to understand Eva. Eva has decided to bring her adopted son back to England.

“The boredom, for Eva, of being a passenger was mitigated by showing Jeremy England. Lambs, elms, cottages, colleges (they passed through Oxford). He missed nothing. From time to time, dread of the impending day overcame her; the aware child, at such moments, went supine against her, shoulder to shoulder. They stopped for lunch at Evesham, roast beef, apple tart, afterwards walking some way along the river looking at boats. ‘You’d like a boat of your own?’ He certainly would. ‘A seagoing boat, with an outboard engine?’ Still better! … Just after three o’clock, the Daimler drew up outside Larkins.”

Living a transient hotel existence Eva begins finally to address Jeremy’s needs – and look around for someone to help him.

The ending is extraordinary – and I won’t say too much about it – except to say it is unforgettable and for me totally unexpected – and took the whole novel up a notch. ( )
1 rösta Heaven-Ali | Nov 11, 2017 |
With hindsight, this was not the most sensible place to start with Bowen - it's her last novel, not terribly easy to place in isolation, and would probably benefit from some knowledge of her earlier work. It's a very ambiguous, modernist book, full of sixties existential doubts and misleading references to everything from Shakespeare to Ibsen and Tolstoy - some of which, like the Chekhovian gun-that-has-to-be-fired-in-the-last-act, seem to be verging on self-parody. And there are all sorts of tantalising hints of same-sex relationships. But the way the characters and settings are presented initially tempts you into trying to read it as a conventional bit of novelistic narrative, which of course doesn't work.

I don't know if I simply wasn't in the mood for it, but somehow, whilst appreciating the quality and depth of Bowen's writing, I never quite got the point of this book. Possibly something to come back to later. ( )
1 rösta thorold | Oct 14, 2017 |
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Eva Trout, Elizabeth Bowen’s last novel, epitomizes her bold exploration of the territory between the comedy of manners and cutting social commentary. Orphaned at a young age, Eva has found a home of sorts in Worcestershire with her former schoolteacher, Iseult Arbles, and Iseult's husband, Eric. From a safe distance in London, her legal guardian, Constantine, assumes that all's well. But Eva's flighty, romantic nature hasn't entirely clicked with the Arbles household, and Eva is plotting to escape. When she sets out to hock her Jaguar and disappear without a trace, she unwittingly leaves a paper trail for her various custodians–and all kinds of trouble–to follow.

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