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The unknown best seller

Elinor Lipman's books are popular in her native US, but hardly known over here. That's all set to change.

April 19, 2020 12:15
Elinor Lipman
5 min read

This is the third time I’ve interviewed somebody who shares my surname,” I mention to novelist Elinor Lipman when we speak over Skype; our face-to-face encounter having been curtailed by coronavirus. We go through the others — Maureen, who it turns out tried to option Elinor’s first novel, and the crime writer Laura Lippman, whose agent is a friend of hers.

Born and raised in Massachusetts, this Lipman is no relation of mine, although she’d certainly make for great company round the dinner table. The author of 12 bestselling books in America, she is less well known this side of the Atlantic, but those familiar with her oeuvre lap up her comic tales of men and women finding themselves in bizarre, comic or bittersweet situations. An early editor, she says, described her work “as romantic comedy for intelligent adults — I liked that a lot”.

Her two most recent novels, On Turpentine Lane, and Good Riddance were published here last month. Both fit that bill; the former is about a woman with an errant fiancé, who moves into a house with a surprising history; the latter a mystery about a woman, her mother and a high school yearbook.

Now 69, Lipman worked in news and PR before taking a creative writing course. Her debut, Then She Found Me, was published in 1990. The story of a women whose life is up-ended when her birth mother suddenly materialises, it was turned into a film directed by Helen Hunt and starring Colin Firth and Bette Midler.

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