Thursday, Dec. 11, 2025--San Antonio
The Correspondent by Virginia Evens is the life of a woman delivered in letters--letters written by her and to her. It has become the surprise breakout hit of 2025 and been named a top book of the year by NPR and The Washington Post. It is a fascinating story of a woman who became powerful when that wasn't common, of a woman who was only 5'2" tall and would not normally become powerful at that time for that reason alone. As a lawyer, she joined and became a partner at a prestigious law firm. Then when the owner of the firm was named a federal judge, she went with him as his clerk. But by the time of this book, the early part of this century, she lives alone in a home facing a bend in the river in Annapolis and is slowly losing her sight. All her life, she has handwritten letters to communicate--sometime to friends, but sometimes to people she has never met before. She continues to carry on a robust schedule of correspondence and through the copies of selections from all of those written letters we learn about the details of her life which has further changes occurring beyond the development of blindness. Even though she is in her 70s, two men are pursuing her. Although she was adopted and never cared to search for information about her birth family, a son gives her s subscription to a DNA service as a Christmas gift. And she continues to dwell on two events in her life that have depressed her and remained on her mind--the death of one of her children when he was 10 years old, and an old court case where she believes more mercy should have been given considering the situation and the fact that the man had a wife and two sons depending on him for support. Reading the letters provides the story piece by piece with occasional nuggets of information that serve as clues to what will be revealed later. I enjoyed the book and gave it 4 1/2 stars out of 5.