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The Correspondent

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8 hours, 36 minutes

Sybil Van Antwerp has throughout her life used letters to make sense of the world and her place in it. Most mornings, around half past ten, Sybil sits down to write letters—to her brother, to her best friend, to the president of the university who will not allow her to audit a class she desperately wants to take, to Joan Didion and Larry McMurtry to tell them what she thinks of their latest books, and to one person to whom she writes often yet never sends the letter.

Sybil expects her world to go on as it always has—a mother, grandmother, wife, divorcee, distinguished lawyer, she has lived a very full life. But when letters from someone in her past force her to examine one of the most painful periods of her life, she realizes that the letter she has been writing over the years needs to be read and that she cannot move forward until she finds it in her heart to offer forgiveness.

Filled with knowledge that only comes from a life fully lived, The Correspondent is a gem of a novel about the power of finding solace in literature and connection with people we might never meet in person. It is about the hubris of youth and the wisdom of old age, and the mistakes and acts of kindness that occur during a lifetime. Sybil Van Antwerp’s life of letters might be “a very small thing,” but she also might be one of the most memorable characters you will ever find.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published April 29, 2025

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About the author

Virginia Evans

4 books2,599 followers

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 16,259 reviews
Profile Image for Diane Barnes.
1,613 reviews446 followers
June 18, 2025
6/18/25 -UPDATE
I attended her bookstore event in Charleston last night. She is warm and witty and charming, was very open about her 20 year writing career with so many rejected novels, then finally the success of this one when she least expected it. Funny, self-deprecating behavior wins me over every time. This has reached best seller lists all over the country, though not NYT yet, but it's being published in 20 countries, with more to come.

I'll just go ahead and say right now that this is my favorite book of the year, no matter that it's only the 18th of May. I've got lots of literary male crushes, but Sybil van Antwerp is my first choice for literary best friend. She's 72 when we begin this epistilary novel, crotchety and outspoken, intelligent and well read, independent and set in her ways. She lives alone and has just found out she will be losing her sight gradually over the next few years.

She has always been an inveterate letter writer, feeling that she can get her thoughts down on paper better than orally, so we are treated to her handwritten letters to friends and family, and to anyone else who she feels deserves a piece of her mind, in good ways and bad. She especially loves to write to authors, has an ongoing exchange with Joan Didion about grief, Diana Gabaldon on the amount of sex in her books, and her letter to Larry McMurtry after her 3rd reading of Lonesome Dove had me in tears. We also get emails to and from a few people and businesses. A lot of people write her back and we are treated to their replies as well.

Through these letters and replies, we get the story of Sybil's life. She's made a few horrendous and life altering mistakes in her time, for which she feels horrible guilt. She makes amends where she can, but that's not always possible. In short, she lives just as we all do, trying the best she knows how.

That's why I love Sybil, she tries. Not always successfully, but always whole-heartedly. She helps when she can, reaches out, isn't afraid to admit fault or assign it. I finished this book wishing I were one of her correspondents, because letter writing is a dying art and when it's done right, is a special thing. Just think of how you feel when you get a simple thank you note instead of a text or email. Or a postcard from a friend who bothered to write, find a stamp and take it out to the mailbox. It always gives me a little jolt of joy, but doesn't happen often. In fact, I plan to write this author myself, a hand-written note to say how much I enjoyed this book. Maybe, just maybe, she'll write me back.
Profile Image for Angela M .
1,456 reviews2,115 followers
May 29, 2025
Dear Sybil,

People will think I’m crazy for writing a letter to a fictional character, but if Virginia Evans had not done such a fabulous job of making you seem real, I might not be doing this . If my Goodreads friends had not loved you so much , especially Diane who had named you her “literary best friend”, and guaranteed that I’d love this book, I might not have discovered you so soon . A link to her review is below. Truth be told, you’re not the first fictional character I’ve written to. I also wrote to Sully , my favorite Richard Russo character. Must be I relate to characters of a certain age who are set in their ways. In any event since this is an epistolary novel and I came to know you through your letters and the letters sent to you , I thought it was an appropriate thing to do.

I have to let you know what getting to know you has meant . Every once in a while on my reading journey an unforgettable character touches my heart and you are among them . Maybe I connected with you because we’re close in age and like you I have reached the point where I have no qualms about speaking my mind . Maybe it’s because you read a lot of novels as I do and I’ve read almost every one you mentioned . I especially love that you enjoy Ann Patchett, one of my favorites. I love that you write letters to authors and just about everyone else in your life. You’re witty and downright funny at times asking a friend to be a plus one at a funeral and self deprecating about how an old black dress might look. On the other hand, the burden of grief you carried made me cry. Maybe I connected with you because I could relate to the fact that you are not perfect and made mistakes along the way. Life hasn’t always been easy, but you’ve been fortunate to have some wonderful people in your life like your best friend and ex sister in law , Rosalie, your neighbor Theodore Lubeck, and I loved the relationship you had with Harry , the teenage son of a friend who really needed your friendship and the letters you wrote to him .

I could go on , but readers need to meet you for themselves. It’s been great getting to know you , Sybil . I’m so very sorry for the burden of grief you carried and I need to tell you my heart was broken for you . However, I felt joy at the triumphs in your life.

Thanks to Virginia Evans for letting us into your life with her debut novel .

Sincerely,
Angela

**********

Dear Goodreads friends, you should read this novel and Diane’s review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Your friend, Angela.
Profile Image for Canadian Jen.
661 reviews2,805 followers
June 25, 2025
Sybil van Antwerp is a saucy septuagenarian. Armed with a pen and paper she cuts to the chase with every correspondence she writes.She writes to her brother, her friend, a gentleman friend, a neighbour, a customer service rep-anyone and everyone. She receives letters
back but not all of them are friendly.

This is told in epistolary form which I’m not usually a fan of, but wow, did this one work.

Sybil is reflecting on her life as she moves through her ‘winter’. The connections she has made and what they meant to her. As she struggles with going blind, she fears what will become of her correspondences, her relationships. She empties her life into these letters- her love, her grief, and her hope.

This was uplifting and at times heavy but beautifully written. A tribute to a life past, but also a life which can be filled in abundance with surprises right up to the end of a winter season.
5 ⭐️

TY to Tracy for sharing your copy!

Profile Image for Meagan (Meagansbookclub).
773 reviews7,209 followers
April 29, 2025
Absolute perfection! Bravo to the audio narration! Maggi-Meg Reed as Sybil was beyond. The full cast brought me to tears.

Reading epistolary books is a reading experience not like anything else. The depth at which we get to know these characters, especially Sybil meant so much to me. By the end, everything came together so beautifully.

“I’m sorry i didn’t do better. I know you think of me as your mother only, but please inside, I am just a girl.”
Profile Image for Lindsay L.
868 reviews1,659 followers
September 3, 2025
5 epistolary stars!

Oh Sybil, you are a character I will never forget!

Sybil enjoys letter writing. It’s her main form of communication. She has been proudly writing letters for decades to everyone in her life — her brother, her best friend, authors of the latest book she loved, neighbours. Sybil feels pride knowing how much thought, planning and precision goes into each letter. Nearing the end of her life, Sybil reflects on what these letters mean to her now and what they have meant over the decades she has been writing letters.

We get to know Sybil through nothing but the letters she has written and received. Each letter carefully dated and addressed to various recipients. A very unique reading experience that I thoroughly enjoyed.

This novel is packed with emotion. It hit my heart. It is a heavy, thought-provoking read. As you read these letters, your heart will break, but it will also heal and be hopeful. Grief is a main theme that I connected strongly with. The writing was fantastic.

Reader be warned - you will likely have a bit of confusion in the beginning with trying to sort out who is who, but don’t let that bother you. Just go with it. It will all come together beautifully in time as you read further.

This book would have taken meticulous planning. I applaud the author for the excellent execution of this story. A truly unique reading experience that I highly recommend!

⚠️ please review trigger warnings which I am not listing as they can be spoilers.
Profile Image for Karen.
742 reviews1,963 followers
May 24, 2025
Audiobook

A beautiful debut novel that brought me to tears
Sybil is in her 70’s, retired from law, divorced, has lost one of her three children when he was in his youth.. has an estranged daughter. Sybil was also adopted as a baby and only has one adopted sibling as family.
She has lived her life since retirement writing letters to people .. it’s just her way of communicating instead of face to face. She comes off as very stubborn, righteous, and privileged at the start, and then changes..
This is a book entirely of letters to and from Sybil for several years.

I listened to the audio which is fantastic… a full cast narration, every person did an excellent job!

A favorite quote:

“I’m sorry i didn’t do better. I know you think of me as your mother only, but please inside, I am just a girl.”
Profile Image for Jayme.
1,549 reviews4,496 followers
November 28, 2025
The Correspondent by Virginia Evans
Narrated by Maggi-Meg Reed as Sybil, and fifteen others for a CAPTIVATING full cast narration.
8 hours 36 minutes at 1x -5 hours 44 minutes at 1.5x

It’s hard to believe that this epistolary novel is a DEBUT. Unfolding entirely through written letters and an occasional email, the story is masterfully crafted.

Meet Sybil Van Antwerp- a tenacious, not always easy to like, septuagenarian who began writing letters as a way to feel close to her birth mother after receiving a letter from her from her loving, adoptive parents.

Most mornings, she sits down to write letters on beautiful imported stationary viewing letters as not only one of the original forms of civility, but also as something to leave behind to those who have cared about her throughout her life.

But, perhaps she ALSO writes because it is a way to keep people at a distance so she won’t get hurt again. Unlike expressing herself verbally, she can take the time to think about what she is saying-instead of rushing to say things that cannot be taken back…

Sybil has been many things over the years-a sister, a friend, a wife, a mother, the distinguished chief clerk to Judge Guy Donnelly, a divorcee, and a grandmother.

And, she will write many letters over the course of this story-to her brother, her best friend, her daughter, letters to the editor, her garden club, and the new Dean of the University who won’t allow her to continue to audit classes. Almost all of the letters end with a query about what book the recipient is currently reading.

She also writes to authors as if they are friends-telling Ann Patchett, Joan Didion, Kazuo Ishiguro, Larry McMurtry, and Diana Gabaldon what their books have meant to her. (minor spoilers for the books mentioned.)

The replies from those who choose to respond each have their own narrator, with a distinctive voice so although I was glad to have a written copy of the book, I always chose to LISTEN simultaneously and highly recommend the Audiobook format.

There is one mysterious letter which she had started writing and added to over the years but it remains unmailed, and one Correspondent who sends unwanted letters to her, signed only as DM.

But, one letter in particular toward the end of the book really stood out. Sybil is RARELY AT A LOSS FOR WORDS, yet we can see that she is tongue tied and struggling to express herself in this one.

And, thus we are treated to the highs and lows of this one MEMORABLE character’s life.

Perfect for Book Clubs

The Publisher’s blurb states: “ The Correspondent is a gem of a novel about the power of finding solace in literature and connection with people we might never meet in person.”

Isn’t this something that we all gift each other here on Goodreads as well?

Available Now!
Profile Image for Marialyce.
2,238 reviews679 followers
July 11, 2025
I know, I know how is it possible that I only found this to be a three star read?

I found the main protagonist to be so very unlikable so that perhaps makes up a major reason why I rated this low. She put forth so many characteristics that I abhorred. I do realize how devastating the loss of a child can be. Of course, thankfully, I do not know what one does to overcome if one can the ravages of that loss. However, I do think, Sybil deserted both her husband and her other children at that point. The children lost a brother, the husband a son, should she not have been there for them? When she didn't attend the funeral of her ex husband it brought sad memories of my ex father in law doing the very same thing to his five children. My husband and his siblings were so very hurt and bereaved and needed a father to shepherd them through the hurt. Just like Sybil no one was there.

She retreated into letter writing, (a lost art it seems), and even here I found little in her writing that showed she was not a cold woman. I know she took in that boy and perhaps that was an effort to try and "make up" for her cold behavior towards her own family. In thinking back, I do not remember a time when Sybil cried or even laughed in the story. She was too stoic for me.

Perhaps my empathy factor in this story was missing, but even if she considered herself a horrible mother, her behavior reinforced that belief. At times I thought her to be an autistic adult who locked herself away in the effort to feel and do as little as she possibly could. She became a hermit within herself.

Jan and I had quite a lively discussion over this story and agreed that when we disagree. we have the best "talks".
Profile Image for Jennifer nyc.
353 reviews424 followers
July 31, 2025
I can’t see anyone not liking this who likes literary fiction. It’s a story from letters told with a buoyancy that had me hopping from one to the next almost without my participation. There were times I’d go back, sensing things were loaded, to make sure there was nothing I missed.

At its center is Sybil, who makes correspondence a ritual and shares letters to and from her dearest, as well as a customer service rep, college dean, and several known novelists. The breadth of these made me laugh every time, and somehow reminded me how at age 11 I wrote to Sire Records begging them to re-release The Pretenders first album with clear lyrics on the sleeve. (It’s just the kind of thing Sybil would do, expressing clear frustration of moving the needle back and back, trying to parse what Chrissie Hynde sang while other, easy-to-understand bands came with printed lyrics she didn’t need).

Sybil is like a whimsical Olive Kitteridge, but pursuing protected connection through controlled words. She starts many threads that made me laugh or nod my head in recognition, sometimes at once with tears in my eyes. And little by little, the threads began to weave together around a single center, giving me a fuller sense of her soul.

There’s so much that personally touches me about letter writing, and in addition to immersing us into a very private life, the book also pays homage to writing as an act: of processing trauma and conflict; of creating nurturing relationships in unexpected places; of teaching, learning and healing. And as these threads come together we see that things are not so light and that Sybil can harden in the face of others, creating ripples of irreversible doom.

Ultimately, this is a story of connectedness: how easy it can be to connect to strangers and create mutually nourishing new paths; how difficult it can be to open to the people who are always there; how a single act can form grudges for years; and how small decisions can permanently change our lives.

Like with Elizabeth Strout, the prose is deceptively simple, and information flows beautifully in poetic reveals. Some of the most devastating experiences are described through the personal lens of these characters, adding freshness to old sorrows. For the first 100 pages I was delighted, feeling it was a solid 4 stars. But when the pieces came together, the work became meaningful.

My grandmother had a correspondence ritual and I know she would’ve loved this book. I wonder if her daughters still have those letters? I had a pen pal from 1997-2023, and like Sybil, still have boxes and albums full from that exchange. Unlike her, we wrote in stream-of-consciousness to remove all veils, and shared art and tactile materials to inspire creativity. Like any relationship, each pen-palship has its particular rhythms and design. Although fictional, Sybil felt real to me, and I cheered her on as she made each victory.

A fast-paced read told in lovely prose with a wide range of emotion and all the stuff of life. I had the pleasure of reading this with Jeannie and having it furnish our new relationship in correspondence.
Profile Image for JanB.
1,369 reviews4,485 followers
July 12, 2025
I love epistolary novels, and the audiobook was narrated by a cast of characters, which was outstanding. I highly recommend the audio format for this book.

Sybil is 73, and a retired lawyer. She spends her days quietly, reading and writing letters to various people. Through her letters to her loved ones, as well as the unsent correspondence she pens to an unknown recipient, we get to know her well.

I won’t name the incidents that shape her life, as they are best discovered for yourself, but she’s lived her life under the weight of grief and guilt over her past. The guilt in particular was crushing and soul-destroying, which led to debilitating depression.

The letters captures the emotions of someone who has lived a long life, had tragedies and losses, and is now living with the gradual loss of her vision. She’s slowly going completely blind. A bitter pill for someone like her whose life revolves around books and written correspondence.

One part of her correspondence that I particularly enjoyed was that she and her best friend shared the books they are reading, all of which are very familiar and most of which I’ve read.

(84 Charing Cross Road was one mentioned, another delightful epistolary novel that I recommend).

Books were such an important part of Sybil’s life, that she often wrote to the author, telling them what their books meant to her, with more than a few who wrote back. These communications were delightful.

In today’s world of instant communication through texting and e-mails, writing letters seems to be a lost art, and I was reminded of the pleasure of receiving a chatty letter in the mail.

(Still…. I do like the immediacy of e-mails & texts and would not want to give that up.)

There is a bit of mystery within the story, of why Sybil is the way she is, and the details unspool in a natural and authentic way.

There’s also a mystery with the anonymous letters she receives from someone who is clearly bitter and angry, but we don’t know who or why until later.

Some of Sybil’s decisions are hard to fathom and easy to judge. But as the story progressed I softened toward her. Or at least I understood her a little better.

It’s a rare person who has made no mistakes or unintentionally hurt people along the way. It’s never too late for a rebirth and forgiveness even if the person you need to forgive is yourself.

But overall, this poignant story was a reminder once again to not judge others without knowing the full story.
What’s the saying? Everyone is carrying a burden we cannot see…

But it’s not all poignancy and mystery. There’s also sprinklings of humor and heart in the letters that had me chuckling.

My book buddy, Marialyce, and I had different reactions to the story that led to some great discussions!
Profile Image for Taufiq Yves.
509 reviews320 followers
December 23, 2025
This novel is made up entirely of letters Sybil wrote to family, friends, ex lovers, and even strangers - there isn’t a single line of third‑person narration.

Virginia Evans drops the traditional all‑knowing narrator and hands all the puzzle pieces to us. As readers, we have to play detective, piecing together Sybil’s life from shifting dates, subtle changes in greetings, and scattered hints.

That slow, piecemeal reveal feels fresh and immersive, even giving off a bit of voyeuristic thrill. Honestly, the book’s biggest strength lies in its narrative form.

Potential Spoilers Ahead

But no matter how clever the form is, it can’t hide the coldness of Sybil. She is really hard to empathize with - at times she just made me angry. Her lifelong habit is pouring emotions into letters and sealing them away. It looks sensitive and delicate on the surface, but it’s really just avoidance. She’s trapped in guilt and self‑pity, hurting her loved ones along the way.

She kept crucial truths from her ex‑husband, treated him with distance, and froze their relationship for years. When he was dying and reached out with a letter, she ignored it. After he passed, she didn’t even attend the funeral. Instead of reflecting, she felt wronged, claiming he hadn’t kept his promise to never leave her. That victim mentality, set against the harm she caused, makes her suffering feel more like self‑indulgence.

Her so‑called “late‑life awakening” comes way too late and feels calculated. At 79, when her eyesight fails and she can’t live independently, she suddenly decides to “live fully.” She enjoys the pursuit of an old friend while conveniently cozying up to a widowed neighbor when she needs help. That is survival instinct, not awakening.

Even worse is her moral absence. A desperate young mother with a child comes to her for help, but Sybil, consumed by her own grief, coldly turns her away - thinking others should suffer too. That choice indirectly leads to tragedy. It’s a short episode, but it completely shatters her image as a “sensitive intellectual woman.”

And then there’s the ending, which is the most controversial part. Evans gives this evasive, hurtful woman a nearly perfect wrap‑up: late‑life romance, world travel, family reconciliation, universal forgiveness. As if simply deciding to change at 80 erases all past sins. To me, that logic is naïve and cheap. Hundreds of pages of moral tension collapse in the final chapters. I’m forced to confront a, selfish soul, only to be handed a sugary happy ending at the last minute.

So yes, to me - the book’s formal experiment works - the letters build a unique literary world, but in terms of character and content, it’s really disappointing, even infuriating. Sybil’s self‑centeredness, avoidance, and moral indifference cancel out the charm of the form.

I think Evans wants us to believe that anyone, even at 80, can find redemption and happiness if they choose to change. That ending may comfort readers who crave warmth, but rationally, it’s too fairy‑tale, too idealized, and it dodges the hard truths of human flaws and moral dilemmas. A more honest, imperfect ending would have fit Sybil better and dug deeper into the darker side of humanity.

In the end, no matter how beautiful the letters are, they can’t write true redemption.

2.4 / 5 stars
Profile Image for Karen.
2,629 reviews1,295 followers
September 28, 2025
“I hope you will tell her she was a perfect baby, born at dawn under a pink sunrise.”

I have been a fan of epistolary style storytelling for quite some time now. Most recently sharing my joy last month (in my 2025 on Goodreads review, August stand-out picks) when I read and reviewed, “Kate & Frida” by Kim Fay. If interested, my review of that book is below.

So, when I heard about this book, I immediately got on the waitlist on June 16, 2025 at my local library to read it. Once it came in on September 4, 2025, I began reading it along with another book I had already started. And, then I just kept reading it, as if it were the only book in the world to read.

On the book cover, author Ann Patchett declares…

“A cause for celebration.”

On page 6 of the hardcover version, the character, Sybil Van Antwerp, our main letter writer, sends Ann Patchett, a letter. A full circle moment?

This is Sybil’s story…her life, her thoughts, her sentiments, her relationships – through letters. (And, the responses she receives.) And, Sybil does not hold back. Through the correspondence she shares, we learn about her past, and the challenges she is facing in the present.

So, who is Sybil really and what makes her so easy-to-read?

“It is the correspondence that is her manner of living.”

A direct-not-afraid-to-say-what-she-thinks kind of character, Sybil displays herself openly for readers to witness and appreciate. There is also a gentleness to her we come to understand as layers of her life are peeled open and laid before readers. Who is she writing to – how is she feeling – what story is she telling – what experience are we as readers coming to learn about as Sybil writes her letters, and we eagerly read them.

There is a touching, heart-full, lyrical soul-full-ness within these pages, of a woman’s life filled with accomplishments, friendship, love, guilt, regrets, grief, insights, forgiveness and heart. There is also a slight mystery.

“I have missed you all this time,…but the fact is that I got every moment of you there was.”

The letters, which translate to the culmination of this book, are moving, elegant, sometimes laugh-out-loud funny, heart-warming, well-crafted, and poignant.

Readers will also appreciate the many other book titles mentioned, and familiar named ‘author’ letters that are included as part of the correspondence.

This is a delightfully charming story that expresses itself in a truly imaginative way. It has the ability to hold readers attention from the beginning to the end.

Kleenex is advised.

Kate & Frida by Kim Fay: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Profile Image for Terrie  Robinson.
647 reviews1,385 followers
August 12, 2025
Epistolary Fiction: An interesting window into a life...

Our protagonist, Sybil Van Antwerp, has much to say in her correspondence with family, friends, acquaintances, and even people she has never met. She's a mother, grandmother, divorcée, prestigious lawyer, and a septuagenarian who struggles with aging and mortality. She never holds back, uses wisdom and experience to get her point across, and when all else fails, her snarkiness slips in.

Sybil Van Antwerp is mostly an acquired taste...

I inhaled this lovely book in three emotionally charged sittings. I laughed and cried, shouted in my head, and spent time staring off in space, thinking about my life and remembering the past. I didn't want this book to end, and the two times I set it down, I couldn't wait to dig back in. And who, in their right mind, can resist a story that references books throughout?

An immersive read, the audiobook has a multicast narration bringing the characters to life and delivering authenticity and uniqueness to each correspondence. Trust me, it's a memorable experience.

The Correspondent, at its core, focuses on the power of human connection through Sybil's correspondence. It also explores themes of regret and forgiveness, family and belonging, and discovering solace and happiness late in life. This is beautifully written and creative storytelling using the epistolary narrative and format. An impressive debut, and I look forward to what's next from Virginia Evans!

5⭐
Profile Image for Liz.
375 reviews
April 13, 2025
Things to do after reading this:
Read lonesome dove and Outlander
Revisit my penmanship
Start a letter writing campaign …subject tbd
Hug my kids
Cry? 😭
Profile Image for Summer.
580 reviews405 followers
August 10, 2025
I love a quiet, introspective read and The Correspondent was pure perfection!

Epistolary novels are quite tricky however Virginia Evans masterfully pulls it off. Centered around Sybil who on the surface is a well mannered, sharp tongued septuagenarian, and learning about her complexities, as well as her backstory was such a wonderful experience. Her growth as a character made her unforgettable

I adored Sybil’s love of reading, and her correspondence with some of my favorite authors, such as Ann Patchett, Joan Didion, Kazuo Ishiguro, and Larry McMurtry, was just the icing on the cake!

As you can see, I could go on and on about how much I loved The Correspondent so I'll keep it short and just say that I highly recommend it!

I listened to the audiobook format which is read by a full cast, Maggi-Meg Reed, Jane Oppenheimer, Carly Robins, Jeff Ebner, David Pittu, Chris Andrew Ciulla, Mark Bramhall, Petrea Burchard, Robert Petkoff, Kimberly Farr, Cerris Morgan-Moyer, Peter Ganim, and Jade Wheeler. If you decide to pick this one up, I highly recommend this format!

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans was published on April 29, 2025 so it’s available now. Many thanks to Penguin Random House Audio for the gifted audiobook and to Crown Books for the gifted copy!
Profile Image for Panic!_at_the_Library .
123 reviews8 followers
May 22, 2025
This book is written entirely in letter format. Every piece of writing comes from or to the FMC. Our MC is a septuagenarian who realizes she is quite lonely. She also seeks resolutions to previous regrets and current problems.

In a way, this book reminds me of Sipsworth, which was about an old lady and her pet mouse. I found Sipsworth to be more moving and interesting overall.

The letter writing is interesting as the reader doesn’t know the truth about many things until they get through all the letters. In this way, the reader may propel through the material to get to the story quicker.

That said, this book, while easy-to-read, was lacking a more substantial storyline. While truly heartbreaking occurrences plague the MC, since everything is delivered to the reader via letter, I had a really challenging time connecting with most characters. The letter format somewhat stalls the reader from diving deeper, and the story may have been stronger with a mix of narratives and letters.

3.5 rounded up.
Profile Image for Antoinette.
1,049 reviews238 followers
June 21, 2025
5 HUGE STARS!!

This book felt like an addiction. I couldn’t read just one! Once I started, I couldn’t stop. I’d say to myself, just one more letter, but I just kept turning those pages. Believe all the hype, this book is “ a cause for celebration.” (Ann Patchett)

Sybil van Antwerp is 73 years old when I first meet her- she is retired and she spends most of her mornings corresponding with numerous individuals, which include family, friends, a friend’s son, authors and others. She is stubborn, obstinate, thoughtful and a very genuine person. I couldn not help falling for her. I could even relate- I am just a few years younger, short ( she’s five foot one, I am 4 foot 11), have 3 children, have decided to go grey, love books, and don’t suffer fools kindly.

Through her correspondence, we learn about Sybil, her family relationships, her interests and her regrets. She is not perfect but I so appreciated her efforts to right her wrongs.

I have become a letter writer over the past few years thanks to a new friend, whose main form of correspondence is through letters. I actually love it- so old fashioned, but so gratifying.

I am so grateful to my GR friends Diane B, Angela and Bianca, whose enthusiastic reviews pushed this book up my cue!

Published: 2025
Profile Image for Susan's Reviews.
1,236 reviews762 followers
March 19, 2025
This is one of those books that you need to put aside and reread in the future to appreciate the little landmines the author has buried here and there.



I requested this ARC because Sybil was a lawyer - but she was more of a "think tank" as opposed to an active litigator. At one point she declares that she loved the law because it was so black and white. Ah, I beg to differ: no, it isn't - and never was, or will be. For every air tight piece of legislation, there is case law that proves the exception to that rule. Hard cases make bad law, and in the British Commonwealth our own revered Lord Denning (a High Court of Appeal judge, and holder of many other prestigious legal offices) often contradicted his own previous decisions. It's all about interpretation in the end - and whether you can convince the presiding judge to see it your way on any given day in court! But I digress....



Sybil Van Antwerp (nee Stone) worked in the background, acting as her senior partner's research arm. When Guy Donnelly became a judge, she followed him to court and served as his clerk. Many clerks go on to open their own successful practices and eventually seek appointment to the bench themselves, but Sybil never sought out the judicial limelight, and she retired when Guy Donnelly did. They were a team and the practice of law held no appeal for her without him. Spoiler alert:



I did enjoy the various letters she wrote to authors (Joan Didion and Larry McMurtry), as well as to a film director (George Lucas), and several other famous persons. (That Sybil got feedback from all of these celebrities in this story was a huge bonus! Loved reading those responses!) When Sybil is romanced by not one but TWO eligible swains, this long, rambling epistolary tale got really interesting for me.



And who were all those "Unsent" letters addressed to? I suspected for a while that it was to her ex-husband, Daan, or her former legal partner, Guy, but, toward the end, spoiler alert:

Sybil was a force to be reckoned with, even though she was battling blindness. She eventually learned to conquer her fears and in the final chapter of her life, she traveled and had more than one second chance at love. And the evolution of her friendship with young, deeply troubled Harry Landy, and his numerous trials and tribulations.... those were the highlights of this story for me. (The closing comment in one of his letters almost brought me to tears.)



I'm rating this rambling story told through a series of often engaging letters a 4.5 out of 5 stars, rounded down to a 4 because NetGalley and Goodreads do not permit half points. My thanks to the author, Virginia Evans, her publisher and NetGalley for an ARC of this novel in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for switterbug (Betsey).
936 reviews1,494 followers
June 3, 2025
Sybil Van Antwerp is the correspondent, a blunt, arch septuagenarian living alone in Annapolis, writing letters at her desk to family, friends, and celebrated authors like Joan Didion and Kazuo Ishiguro. Moreover, she writes to personnel at a DNA lab (Sybil was adopted, and she’s ambivalent about the biological search), editors of newspapers, a struggling kid, her garden club, and a Dean of English of a university that won’t let her audit a class. Even at age 73, Sybil has some growing to do; she’s quick to give advice and analyze others, but she can also be cagey and stubborn and even avoidant about her own thorny issues.

Epistolary novels unfold in small reveals. Sybil is also sly--to give up secrets by her pen while still tucking them away under layers of onionskin. This novel is intimate and telling. I was immediately drawn into Sybil’s life—all the missives were either to or from her, and each one a joy to read.

Sybil is a mother and grandmother—a divorced, retired attorney and former Chief clerk for a successful judge, a keen reader of literature, and ardent gardener. Her daughter, Fiona, is an architect, living in Sydney. We hear Sybil’s feelings rather pointedly about that long-distance daughter. The friction is apparent in Sybil’s letters to her best friend, Rosalie. She pulls no punches when it comes to expressing her feelings and opinions toward others. She gets along fine with her son, Bruce.

Daan, her ex-husband, is Belgian, and he returned to Bruges after the divorce (by the way, do visit Bruges, it is lovely!!!!). Early on, we learn that Sybil and Daan had a son, Gilbert, who died as a young boy. Sybil’s scrappiness about other subjects doesn’t extend to Gil; it is evident that she hides her deepest moments of anguish under her nostalgic memories. I sensed a stabbing of unresolved pain, a nondisclosure threatening to unravel her tightly knitted history.

Every word that Sybil writes (mostly in written letters, a few necessary emails) is germane to the secrets and falsehoods that she is itching to unburden herself from, at least that’s my take on it. Persnickety and persistent, Sybil is alternately shrewd and naïve, sometimes both at once! She also refuses to travel, even to visit Fiona. Suffering from an unnamed disease, Sybil knows that she will inevitably go blind. She only shares that with a few select people, but her nuclear family is unaware.

I read this book in two days, I was so absorbed. A little suspense is thrown in when Sybil receives menacing letters from an anonymous writer and we also read letters she writes to an unknown source (not difficult to figure out). The themes are both of solace and isolation, family and grief, and, perhaps my favorite, healing through literature.

Writing to Larry McMurtry after reading Lonesome Dove for the third time. “I am an old woman and my life has been some strange balance of miraculous and mundane.” Regarding the ending of LD and the bitter disappointment of the characters: “What I had seen those years ago as a lack of mercy became to me a presence of… courage—to hurt them! To leave them in dismay! It was courageous because it was unbearable but it was true…” At the end, I held my heart in my hands.

Virginia Evans, may I write you a letter?
Profile Image for Rosh ~catching up slowly~.
2,377 reviews4,893 followers
December 20, 2025
In a Nutshell: An epistolary novel with a geriatric woman in the lead. Realistic and complex character development, which is a surprise considering how we see the story only through letters. Character-driven, obviously. Too many themes. But a commendable debut. Recommended, though not with much gusto. Go in blind.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Plot Preview:
Maryland, USA. Sybil Van Antwerp. Seventy-three at the start of the story. Mother, grandmother, retired legal clerk, divorced. Sybil has always loved writing letters. Whether to known people such as family members, friends, and acquaintances, or to professional connections such as work associates and customer service agents, or to strangers such as famous politicians and authors, Sybil never stops writing. Her preferred mode of communication is the actual physical letter, though she does use emails when there is no other option. At her age, she doesn’t expect many alterations to her routine. But some unexpected developments force her to confront a painful period from her past.
The story comes to us through various letters written by and to Sybil from 2012 onwards.


As this is an epistolary novel, it covers quite a number of characters and subplots, not all of which are revealed in the initial 10-20%. As such, the above preview doesn’t indicate the actual depth of the storyline. It is best to go in blind for this story. My review is spoiler-free, despite its length.


Bookish Yays:
💌 The tiny preface, setting the foundation for Sybil’s character. The only non-epistolary part of the book, but a much-needed introduction of the key character.

💌 The characters other than Sybil. We see some of them only mentioned in others’ letters, while the rest are more active contributors to the book by writing to Sybil. Good and not-so-good, relatives and strangers, young and old, these characters cover a fairly wide range of human beings. I like how we get to know many of them well even though we see them only in bits and pieces through what they choose to write or what is written about them.

💌 As Sybil is a reader and interacts with other readers, there are frequent mentions of books and authors. She even has a regular correspondence with some well-known authors.

💌 The epistles. Always sounding like letters, always heartfelt, always detailed. Most of Sybil’s letters are written in a classic and elegant formal style. These offer the true sense of reading an epistolary novel. The letters come from multiple sources, and replies are not always present. But this adds to the mystique of the story.

💌 Character-driven, as is the case with epistolary novels. Fans of plot-oriented novels might struggle a bit, but I like character-oriented storytelling, so I enjoyed this aspect.

💌 The way a person’s realisations, realignments, and regrets are revealed only through letters. Beautifully handled, with many emotions and plenty of humour as well.

💌 Many thought-provoking and quotable quotes. This one was my favourite: " I know you think of me as your mother only, but please remember, inside I am also just a girl."


Bookish Okays:
📮 Sybil. Neither a vulnerable old lady nor a cantankerous meddler. But also not always likeable or sensible. She’s the kind of person who is concerned about outsiders but is either ignorant of or indifferent to her own family’s requirements. She even makes racist comments in one letter. (It was anti-Indian, so I was taken extra-aback at that unexpected remark.) Basically, if you want your leads to be likeable, Sybil might not be your type of person. But she is a convincing old lady, flaws and all. And there is some growth in her character at the end.

📮 The story covers quite a lengthy time span, from 2012 till more than a decade ahead. You need to keep track not just of the correspondence dates but also of the key characters’ advancing ages. Some of the letters aren’t in chronological order.

📮 With multiple letters come multiple characters. The start is especially confusing with too many characters mentioned within a few letters. But things ease after a while as familiarity increases.

📮 There are strong political opinions in a few letters. This wasn’t a big bother for me as my views matched the views expressed. But some readers are sure to be bugged by this unexpected inclusion.

📮 While the letters handle many excellent themes and even highlight how it’s never too late to learn and to make recompense, the fact also is that there are too many disparate themes. The ‘kitchen sink’ of themes, which always creates trouble for debut authors, is overflowing in this one.

📮 One of the letters by Sybil is an unsent one, but she keeps adding to it. This probably makes it count more as a journal entry addressed to someone than as a letter. The identity of the recipient was guessable to me, and the confirmation of my guess led to some unanswered doubts. Regardless, this was an interesting way of letting us see Sybil’s inner thoughts.


Bookish Nays:
📧 Two of the developments weren’t to my liking. Both are major spoilers, so I can’t go into these. But suffice it to say, one of these is a current fictional trend that simply doesn’t appeal to me, and the other is an apology that simply shouldn’t have been offered because what originally happened was just and fair.

📧 The cover. I get that the songbirds represent the letter-writing between Sybil and her closest friend, the only person who has the guts to tell Sybil when she’s going wrong. But this is such a limited part of the book. I don’t think this cover represents the book accurately. In fact, I didn’t even pay attention to the book until I saw a friend’s GR update with another cover (image below), one that suits the book much better IMHO. This cover is too dull in comparison.

The Correspondent by Virginia Evans


Overall, while I wasn’t blown away by the book (I have read enough epistolary novels to not be in awe of them), I still liked it a lot. The layered characters and their true-to-life behaviour compensated for the overload of themes and the two unnecessary plot inclusions. Plus, all of us who have been alive long enough to know the joy of receiving and writing a handwritten letter will feel quite nostalgic about the letters in this story.

This has been promoted as a debut work, and even nominated for “Readers' Favorite Debut Novel” in the Goodreads Choice Awards 2025. However, the author has self-published a novel a decade ago. I guess self-publishing isn't counted as publishing, because even the author’s website and social media has no reference to that first book. It is mentioned only on Goodreads and in a few newspaper articles about this novel. Strange.

I think this is the kind of book that might work better on a reread, as the advantage of hindsight can help keep track of the clues we missed the first time around. If you haven’t yet experienced a proper epistolary novel, this is a good one to begin with, keeping in mind that reading epistolary novels needs more concentration than ordinary novels. Also note that this isn't a light read. Though it has only letters, many of the inclusions are potentially upsetting. Do check the content warnings.

The audiobook supposedly has a full-cast narration, so I am sure it will be a great way of experiencing this novel. However, considering the abundance of characters and letters and dates, I wouldn’t recommend the audio version to audio newbies.

Recommended, though not with as much gusto as some of my GR friends. To appreciate this book, you need to be fond of character-driven writing and preferably of epistolary novels as well. Not for those looking for fast-paced or plot-driven storytelling.

3 stars.


My thanks to Crown Publishing for providing the DRC of “The Correspondent” via NetGalley. This review is voluntary and contains my honest opinion about the book.


Content Warnings: (Major Spoilers Below.)
Infertility, miscarriage, child death, illness, aging, adoption, potential blindness, parent-child relationship issues, death of loved ones, suicide attempt, animal death, car accidents, cancer, refugee issues.


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Profile Image for emilybookedup.
603 reviews11.1k followers
May 27, 2025
you know those books you don’t expect much of them pick up on a whim but you end up absolutely falling in love with? this was that book for me! 🎧📖💖

this was not on my 2025 release radar at all, but i started seeing some of my fellow bookworms post about it and was in need of a new audiobook so i snagged it on a whim and finished it in two settings. this book was SO creative as it’s an epistolary novel (told in the form of letters).

read if you like: THE EVIDENCE OF THE AFFIAR (another epistolary novel), TOM LAKE and SANDWICH. also for fans of family drama, pure litfic and character driven novels

i didn’t know much about it going in and tbh reco you do the same—just know that it follows adult characters really reflecting on their life through letters. our MC is a darling lady named Sybil and she was so likeable even despite her flaws (which you learn through her letters and life reflection in her old age).

🎧🎧🎧🎧 and the audiobook!!!!! OMG. my favorite thing about this book was the full cast audio narration! if you are looking for an audiobook or even a place to start with audiobooks, i highly recommend this one! the audiobook format brought the raw emotion and feelings of the characters as told through the letters to life in such a beautiful way. i’m sure the physical copy is good, but i would find it hard to believe that you could really feel the raw emotion like you do in the audiobook if you ended up reading it. esp the final chapter 😭😭😭😭😭

this book was also pretty quick and really easy to read despite it covering some very heavy topics (child loss, cancer, blindness, family drama and more).

i think what i loved most about it was how raw yet simple it was… it’s just a simple reminder that we’re all just little people living in this big ole world and have our own internal struggles and desires. also how you’re never “too old” to start over… whether it’s with a new hobby, travelling the world, falling in love again… or asking for forgiveness.

i also loved how the author used written letters as a way to bring back some of that reflection and nostalgia. there’s something to be said about sitting down, taking out a paper and a pen, really sitting with your thoughts and being sure of what you wanna say, and then putting it pen to paper. i think there’s so much power in the pause… and it’s something that in this digital world with cell phones and immediate contact at all times is something we could all have a gentle reminder of.

now i’m off to go write a letter to someone i love 💖

a big thanks to PRH audio for the audio copy! go grab it now!
Profile Image for Thomas.
1,863 reviews12k followers
June 14, 2025
3.5 stars

I liked reading about the life and perspective of a 78-year-old woman, as older people’s voices are often underrepresented in literature. The Correspondent contained moving themes related to grief, physical illness and decline, and how relationships stay or fray over time. I appreciated that Sybil was an imperfect protagonist; she felt real, which made many of the subplots even more poignant (e.g., vision loss, her layers of loss, the pleasure she finds in reading and writing her friends and family).

Unfortunately the epistolary format was a little dull for me. Especially the first half I found the writing monotonous and one-note. Still giving the book 3.5 stars because of how it captures aging and what love and loss can look like as one gets older.
Profile Image for Brina.
1,238 reviews4 followers
May 12, 2025
The art of letter writing is personal and has been diminished since the advent of the internet. I have always enjoyed writing and note to many that it is easier to express myself on paper than through speaking. Sometimes I think I enjoy writing reviews as much or even more than reading because it allows me to express my feelings about what I read in the manner I know best. Whether it was beginning correspondence with multiple penpals during adolescence or drafting long letters home during my summers at sleep away camp, writing has played a role in my life. Two books of letter writing stand out in my reading life: Dear Mister Henshaw, of which I still own a copy, and 84, Charing Cross Road. In both situations, the primary letter writer finds someone to pour their life out to and receive letters in return. One book is fictional but received many awards for young readers at the time, and the other lead the author to fame and life as a renown author. Although I generally do not read authors’ debuts, when I read the blurb of The Correspondent, it spoke to me. Combining letter writing with the knowledge of a life well lived, Virginia Evans crafted the life of Sybil Van Antwerp out of her letters to various people in her life. A personality that reminded me of various older women of knowledge who I have come across in my reading endeavors, Sybil Van Antwerp sounded like a woman who I would love to get to know better, and I immersed myself in her life over the course of mere hours.

Sybil Van Antwerp harbors a secret that has been plaguing her for years. To know the secret is to know Sybil, but she did not tell a living soul for over forty years of her life. On the surface, one would think that Sybil is a bitter old lady, and in many ways she is. Living in Annapolis, divorced for years, and maintaining a working only relationship with her daughter, Sybil turns to reading and writing for her primary pastimes as a retiree. Sybil began writing in high school when her friend Rosalie moved and she needed a sounding board. Sybil’s mother had just been diagnosed with cancer and Rosalie was the only one who understood her at the time. Both young people loved to read and exchanged the books they read, something they would do for the rest of their lives. In high school, Sybil was enamored with the work of C.S. Lewis, and he became the first author that she corresponded with. When Lewis responded, it gave Sybil the courage to write to writers for the rest of her life, and she would maintain a writing relationship with Joan Didion, who she called a friend, and Ann Patchett, among others. When discussing why she wrote to young people, she told them that famous people are just people, so do not be shy to write to them. While Sybil’s daughter Fiona rolled her eyes at her mother’s ability to write to strangers and yet not develop real relationships with people, writing is all Sybil had, and it kept her grounded during many difficult periods of her life.

Readers find out that after over forty years, Sybil still mourns the loss of her son Gilbert and blames herself for his death. Sybil is adopted and believes that she failed as a wife and mother and turned to her work as a lawyer to mask her lack of maternal instinct. From work as a lawyer and clerk, Sybil turned to writing as a retiree. It is how she kept up with her law partner, friends, family, and even minor acquaintances. She would write to the Dean of colleges to request class catalogues so that she could audit courses and continue her correspondence with authors. Admittedly, the blurb for this book mentioned Sybil writing to Larry McMurtry, and that is what whet my interest for his book, as I have been reading through and savoring the Lonesome Dove tetralogy. Sybil’s insights into the book, of which she read three times prior to going blind, made me savor the series anew, and, allowed me to see how books become friends for the best of us introverts. The difference between the fictional Sybil Van Antwerp and the rest of us is that she received actual responses from authors while the rest of us in modern times might be fortunate to receive an automated response via email, a medium that Sybil despises. Although it has been ten or more years, Sybil reminds me of a cross between my paternal grandmother and her first cousin, and made me appreciate the bygone generations and their art of communication via letter writing.

Evans notes that “the letters one has sent out into the world, the letters received back in turn, are like pieces of a magnificent puzzle…Isn’t there something wonderful in that, to think that a story of one’s life is preserved in some way, that this very letter may one day mean something, even if it’s a very small thing, to someone?” Sybil notes that in her years of correspondence with Rosalie that the two of them could write a book, although it might not mean anything to anyone else. I beg to differ. Sybil has poured out her feelings to Rosalie in a way that she could not by speaking. She cited her failures as a mother and talked of their friendship, and both women discussed both major issues and the minutiae of life. I would find that fascinating but I’m a pseudo-writer in my own right. Why I say that Sybil reminds me of my grandmother is that she would speak to people who most of us only know in passing and formulate friendships out of these interactions. Sybil would do the same through her letter writing and found new friends in the customer service representative and college professor. Writing gave her the courage to find friendship and love with her neighbor in the winter of their lives and to find her biological relatives when her son Bruce bought her a subscription to Kindred for the holidays. Sybil Van Antwerp might not come across as sharp and intelligent as a speaker- and she detests public speaking- but as a writer, people might think that she was one of the elite intellectuals in America. One would never know that she is a five foot, septuagenarian going blind, who spends most of her existence at a writing desk.

Most debuts I have encountered over the years are not polished. It is why I read writing by most once they have a few or more books under their belt and then return to their body of work. It leads me to patterns in their writing and offers aha moments that I might not have should I have chosen to start with debuts. The Correspondent does not read like a debut. Virginia Evans has crafted together a life of a complex person and the relationships she has maintained throughout her life. Whether it is her loving relationship with a distraught teen, encouraging a high school student to go into law, or mending the past with her daughter, one views Sybil as a real person with real problems, not a persona. Colum McCann has noted that just because a character only lives on paper does not mean that they are not real. Sybil Van Antwerp with all her baggage and grief and how that has brought her to the last season of her life is real for me. She has taught me that I should perhaps not spend my entire existence reading and writing and develop lasting relationships with my family and friends and even people I meet in passing. It is disheartening that with the internet that letter writing has become a lost art. It is easy to send a text but those words are most often than not immediately disposed of. I miss taking the time to write a personalized letter. Sybil Van Antwerp feels to me as real as a letter writer as the real life Helene Hanff, so I savored her life in mere hours as I am wont to do with epistolary novels. If this is a debut, I believe the sky is the limit for Virginia Evans. I will be following her career with much intrigue and interest.

4.5 stars
Profile Image for Monica.
182 reviews81 followers
June 25, 2025
Absolutely splendid. A masterpiece.

This is one of those rare books that defies personal reading preferences. I primarily read sci-fi/fantasy and horror, and I find books that explore the mundane topics of everyday life dull. But this one rises above that through sheer brilliance.

If you enjoy vivid characters, beautiful writing (seriously, the word choices are first-class), and a remarkable story, you’ll love this book.

A standing ovation for the author!
Profile Image for Lisa.
624 reviews229 followers
August 28, 2025
Virginia Evans' debut novel The Correspondent is a quick and enjoyable read with a surprising amount of heft. Sybil, now in her 70's has written and received letters throughout most of her life.

"I did actually find, through correspondence, inexplicable relief. I could write to anyone. I could take the time to think through what I wanted to say, practice, rewrite, and get it exactly how I wanted it. It was so much easier for me to write than it was to have a conversation, even. I was insecure, painfully so. . . . you wondered if maybe I could only have meaningful relationships through letters, and I have been thinking about that. When I was young, by writing letters I found a framework that made living easier, and that has never changed. However, I do wonder if by conducting the most intimate relationships of my life in correspondence, I have kept, since I was a child, a distance between myself and others.

I spent time pondering these ideas and how they play out in my life and the lives of those around me. I also thought about the use of email and texts. My musings:

IMO texts are for quick notifications or queries such as, "I'm running late." or "What time am I supposed to pick you up?"

Email is phenomenal when you want to communicate with and/or between a number of people, when you want to reach someone quickly, or when you want to lay something out clearly and methodically and have a record of it.

Letters can touch me in a much more personal and heartfelt way. The fact that they generally call the writer to careful and measured thought and allow time to get the wording just right makes them perfect conveyances for emotionally charged issues, especially where you might say something you regret in a face to face conversation. So sometimes this insulation is a benefit. And sometimes it is not.

My preferred method of communication is face to face encounters. I love the whole package--facial expressions, spoken tone, even touch when appropriate. If it is not feasible, a Zoom or a phone call is second best.

Evans has our Sybil making connections; confronting past and present trauma; sharing delight; seeking, bestowing, and finding forgiveness--all through her letters. I love watching Sybil unfurl, connect, and grow as I read her correspondence.

Evans moves Sybil with ease between states of gravitas, earnestness, humor, practicality, irritation, and delight. An added pleasure for me is that I have read most of the books mentioned in these letters (Sybil is an avid reader.) and have the remaining few on my tbr. I did not add a single book to my list. 😁

I have found a place in my heart for this feisty, prickly, stubborn, warm-hearted woman.

Publication 2025
Profile Image for CarolG.
917 reviews544 followers
May 3, 2025
Sybil Van Antwerp prefers to correspond with people through the written word. A mother, grandmother, wife, divorcée, distinguished lawyer, she has lived a full life.

I'm very impressed by this epistolary novel. To my mind it's a most unusual presentation of a work of fiction. I got so caught up in Sybil's life that I had a hard time putting my Kindle down. Sybil will write to anyone at the drop of a hat and I was wishing I could develop a correspondence with her. Her communications are well written and lucid. I liked how Sybil would tell a recipient what she's currently reading and ask 'What are you reading?'. Amongst the letters to and from her brother, her friends, her children, various authors, and others, are a number of "unsent" pages of a letter and we're left wondering who the recipient is until the end. Just an amazing piece of literature that I highly recommend although it probably won't be to everyone's taste. I'll definitely be watching for whatever Virginia Evans does next.

Aren't those the cutest little birds on the cover?! I thought I liked the cover with the caricature of "the correspondent" better but I've grown to love the birds.

Thank you to Crown Publishing, via Netgalley, for approving my request to read an advance copy of this book. All opinions expressed are my own.
Publication Date: April 29, 2025
Profile Image for Tini.
590 reviews28 followers
September 26, 2025
Signed, sealed, unforgettable.

"Imagine, the letters one has sent out into the world, the letters received back in turn, are like the pieces of a magnificent puzzle, or, a better metaphor, if dated, the links of a long chain, and even if those links are never put back together, which they will certainly never be, even if they remain for the rest of time dispersed across the earth like the fragile blown seeds of a dying dandelion, isn’t there something wonderful in that, to think that a story of one’s life is preserved in some way, that this very letter may one day mean something, even if it is a very small thing, to someone?"

Sybil Van Antwerp has spent her life putting pen to paper, and now spends her retirement writing to family, friends, professors, authors, and even the occasional customer service agent who somehow becomes a confidant. Most mornings, around half past ten, she sits down to compose her letters, including the one she has written for years but never sent. But when unexpected letters from her past arrive, forcing her to revisit old wounds, Sybil must finally confront the painful history she has tried so hard to fold away, and perhaps discover the power of forgiveness.

"The Correspondent" is nothing short of extraordinary, and Sybil is one of those characters you will never forget. Seeing how this is an epistolary novel, and given we only catch different glimpses of Sybil in her various correspondences, how astonishing that this book manages to so vividly portray this woman. Through Sybil’s letters - at times prickly, often wise, always deeply human - we see an entire life sketched out: triumphs and regrets, stubbornness and humor, grief and love. At first, Sybil may seem like a judgmental septuagenarian, but letter by letter, she becomes impossible not to adore, and I found myself wishing I could be her pen pal.

Poignant and tender, "The Correspondent" is a beautifully written reminder of how brief life is, how each of us carries unseen, often heavy burdens, and how writing - whether to others or to ourselves - shapes the way we make sense of it all. It’s often dryly funny, sometimes heartbreakingly heavy, and always beautifully real and moving.

I was initially unsure how a book full of various correspondence would translate to an audiobook, but the audiobook cast was outstanding, so much so that I quickly set aside my physical copy to listen instead.

"The Correspondent" is one of those rare novels that lingers long after you’ve turned the last page. Five very enthusiastic stars - and not just because it made me want to go buy a stack of stationery.
Profile Image for Karen J.
595 reviews278 followers
November 22, 2025
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️


An absolutely beautiful written novel and the main character Sybil brought me to tears many times.
Profile Image for Melanie.
Author 8 books1,406 followers
November 18, 2025
“Perhaps if you have children, they will remember you; if you have grandchildren, they, God allowing, may also retain a few fragments of memory including you, but their children will not. They may keep some old photos in a book on a shelf, and perhaps two or three times in a lifetime may turn the page and find your face and think, Ah, yes, doesn’t Jimmy resemble this great-great-grandfather Mick, and continue to turn the page, and so that will be what is left of you, nearly erased, in fewer than three generations, and your life, the life you see from the inside, right now, as monumental, will be reduced to the blood in their veins and perhaps, if you are lucky, a distant namesake, a name plucked from the family tree that has come back in vogue after seventy-odd years as fashionable things tend to do and slapped on a newborn baby who will know nothing of YOU.

And yet, if one has committed oneself to the page, the tragedy I’ve just laid out will not apply. Imagine, the letters one has sent out into the world, the letters received back in turn, are like the pieces of a magnificent puzzle, or, a better metaphor, if dated, the links of a long chain, and even if those links are never put back together, which they will certainly never be, even if they remain for the rest of time dispersed across the earth like the fragile blown seeds of a dying dandelion, isn’t there something wonderful in that, to think that a story of one’s life is preserved in some way, that this very letter may one day mean something, even if it is a very small thing, to someone?”

This oddball of a book then. A little bit haunted, a little bit anachronistic, a little bit brash. A fish out of water, a small volcanic island in the sea of postmodern tales and ironic self-reflections. The whimsical, wacky, heartbroken songbird that is the character of Sybil Van Antwerp.

A vibrant ode to the life that we see from the inside, as we decide to share it (or not quite) in a letter, one of the most deliberate and mysterious acts of reaching out to others that humans ever had.

How else, truly, do we pin our inner lives down and hope that, miraculously, it will matter to someone else, somewhere down the line?

The world can only respond to you if you speak yourself to it.

To write a letter then. As an act of defiance.
As an act of love, to repair the living.
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Author 2 books2,057 followers
May 26, 2025
A few years ago, during a low period of my life, I came across a box of handwritten letters that my mother had written to me while I was away at college. In one of them, my silly 17-year-old self had written to her about how my life was going to be destroyed forever because I didn’t get into the sorority of my choice. My mother answered with a wise, loving, and empathetic letter, urging me to be more resilient and expressing utmost confidence in my future. Her letter lifted me up at the time and reading it again after so many years, I moved forward, once again enveloped in her love.

That is a testimony to the incredible power of letter writing. Virginia Evans, in her remarkable novel – which I’m sure will be in my Top 10 of this year – captures this power by creating a character readers won’t soon forget. Sybil Van Antwerp is a septuagenarian and retired law clerk, whose life is gradually revealed through her correspondence with her best friend, brother, disturbed young son of a former colleague, dean of her former college, neighbor, authors such as Ann Patchett and Joan Didion, and a few surprises.

Sybil, who is outspoken, blunt, and curiously private, is the mother of two living children, and only has a speaking relationship with one of them. Her daughter is estranged, and her middle son died when he was just a boy. Writing is a solace to her. At one point, Sybil writes, “Imagine: the letters one has sent out into the world, the letters received back in turn, are like the pieces of a magnificent puzzle…even if they remain for the rest of time, dispersed across the earth like the fragile blown seeds of a dying dandelion, isn’t there something wonderful in that, to think that a story of one’s life is preserved in some way, that the very letter may one day mean something, even if it is a very small thing, to someone?”

It is through these letters that we learn Sybil is complex (as we all are): a tapestry of errors, hurts, joys, and acts of unspeakable kindness. She has caused pain, yes, but she has also healed aching hearts. And she has gradually gained insights. To her best friend, she writes, “We are thirty in our hearts, before all the disappointment, all the way few thought it would be, but then again, it has also been magic.” None of us get through life scot-free, but maybe, just maybe, life will show us grace if we believe in the healing balms of literature and connections and allow ourselves to self-forgive.

As a writer – as a correspondent – myself, this book made me feel all the feels. By the end, I knew and loved Sybil, and that’s quite a feat for any author to create.
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