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Letter Writing Rediscovered: A Book Review of The Correspondent by Virginia Evans

By Nancy J. Fagan December 24, 2025 Hobbies

I inherited a stack of exquisitely written love letters that my mother had received from her paramour in the South Pacific in WWII. The pages are neat and the care in each swirl of an S or loop of a Y is evidence that love had been injected into every letter. A secret stash she kept her entire life, I can’t help but think she wanted me, a writer, to discover them one day.

Now, personal letter writing by post has gone the way of the Pony Express in the advent of email. Once considered a beautiful art form in its own right, rife with fine penmanship and loving details etched on crisp stationery, we now tend to communicate as a society through text messages and emails rather than take the time to handwrite and pay to mail a letter.

Many of us have stuffed envelopes from our younger days that are held with ribbons in perpetuity, like relics. First love, fun friendships, and recountings of history itself are spelled out within each sheet. Stacks of old letters fill library archives across the world, tempting us to touch and read them. Those who still use the medium do so artfully, a special note card or holiday card capturing the swoops of cursive.

Evans’ Epistolary Journey

Virginia Evans revives the art of letter writing in her debut epistolary novel, The Correspondent, a New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestseller. Lauded by author Ann Patchett and others, Evans’ ability to relay the intricacies of a life through Sybil Van Antwerp’s purpose-driven letters is remarkable in its breadth.

The reader is taken in by the variety of this former lawyer’s correspondents as her relationship to each person is reflected in the tone and demeanor of the letters she pens. She writes to friends and family as well as a company representative, a college dean, and a troubled teenager, among others. In each string of letters, connections develop despite culture, age, or position.

The complexity in Evans’ writing goes further. Subtle references to Sybil’s personal views and unveiling of her vulnerabilities creates a compelling, hard-to-put-down read. Layer upon layer of complication is added through every missive.

Discovering Vulnerability

Sybil, at 73 years old, is losing her vision and as a result has a terrible car accident that she downplays to her family. Her fear of being placed in a nursing home couches the reality of the totaled car into a forgettable fender bender. Throughout this book, Evans shapes what Sybil writes into a form of honesty that often supersedes the truth.

Also among the recipients of Sybil’s letters are famous authors and a wide variety of her colleagues. Not everyone is a fan of Sybil and her lifelong work with a local judge has not always added positively to that image. She’s made mistakes, regrets particular actions, and pines over missed opportunities. For example, Sybil and her best friend have shaky times but their bond is deep. I thought about my best friend while reading through these letters and how easily precious moments can slip away if we don’t capture them. Evans’ use of these plot points create relatability with the reader.

Older Lovers, Family Roots

Sybil finds herself in a love triangle, one that lays bare her reluctance for intimacy. Adopted, she dreams of her birth mother coming to claim her. In addition, her relationship with her daughter is captured as delicate and strained in its boundaries but through the letters, she discovers a path to healing and self-acceptance.

The Layers Deepen

Sybil also carries a deep grief with her and the source of that pain is revealed through one series of poignant letters. The Correspondent is relevant to anyone who has lived a life filled with friends, foes, associates, and a variety of experiences, including painful losses. We all yearn for connection and Sybil goes to extremes to find it through writing. She uses the letters to build walls between the recipient and herself and says what she wants because you cannot interrupt a letter.

I admired Evan’s word choices and her writing style that pulses life through the book. At times I had to stop and re-read passages because I was lost in their beauty the first time and wanted to read deeper for the meaning the second. The epistolary style stands out, and the prose is crisp, propelling the book forward with an enjoyable cadence. The Correspondent was one of my favorite reads of 2025.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

What are your favorite books of 2025? What themes did they explore? Have you read an epistolary style book before? Do you think The Correspondent would make your stack?

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Tessa

Reading this warmed my heart. I remember my father’s envelopes that he’d sent to his father during WW2. The front and back of the envs were painted with the prettiest pictures that I remember when little. Dad was 17, so didnt yet have a sweetheart until he returned home and met my mum while waiting at a set of traffic lights in Australia. My mum was waiting to cross the traffic lights at the other side of the street. Not sure how their romance blossomed due to this incident as I was never told. However this has now given me an idea to write a story about it and make it blossom into something special!

Writing is my ‘thing’, my passion and its been my main form of my expression and healing throughout my life.
Ill try to find a copy of The Correspondent and read it myself. Letter writing is a beautiful lost personal art that brought so much joy when received. That’s why I still give and send cards when I can, but sadly not many people remember private addresses anymore to send them to. How special was it to find a personal letter in our letterbox back then that didn’t appear to be a bill? That letter lifted us up and we re read more than once.

Nancy J Fagan

You are so right–how exciting to find a handwritten letter in the mailbox! I encourage you to keep on writing Tessa!

Sally Tibbetts

I really enjoyed this book so much. I’m a lover of letter writing to this day and like you, I have my parents correspondence from WWII when my dad was stationed, like yours, in the south Pacific. His hand writing was extraordinary! I have a collection of books that contain letters of famous and some not so famous. I think The Correspondent just might make people want to sit down and write a REAL letter again. It’s a great discussion book for book groups too.

Nancy J Fagan

Those wartime letters are treasures. Both my parents were in the So Pacific but not romantically involved at the time. And yes, The Correspondent is a great bookclub offering Sally!

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The Author

Nancy J. Fagan is a writer, novelist, and nurse from western Massachusetts. She loves to create strong female protagonists, often in medical scenarios. You’ll find her next short story in Regal House’s anthology 20 over 60, publishing in Fall ‘26. For more, please visit www.nancyjfagan.com or follow @writerfagan on Instagram.

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