Evelyn Hargrave dies quietly at home at eighty-three. She is not ready to leave.
Not because she has unfinished business in the gothic sense. Not out of malice. But because she cannot quite believe the people she loved are already rewriting her - and because, watching from the liminal space between gone and not quite gone, she is finally beginning to understand what she got wrong.
After Evelyn is a first-person novel narrated by Evelyn herself: sharp, sardonic, occasionally furious, and capable of devastating tenderness when she drops the armour. From her position just beyond the threshold, she watches her family descend on her house - niece Sally, who performs grief the way she performs everything; godson Martin, who borrowed kindness like it was interest-free; oldest friend Ruth, who loved her and envied her in equal measure for forty years. And Clara, her seventeen-year-old grandniece, who is the only one who ever saw her clearly.
What unfolds is not a haunting in the traditional sense. Evelyn can flicker lights, nudge objects, play the right song on a temperamental kitchen radio. She cannot speak plainly, be seen, or stop anyone from doing anything she disagrees with. Her power is the power of presence - restless, ironic, deeply felt. And as the family fractures over the house and the estate, she begins to reckon with the truth Maggie, her housekeeper and closest friend, delivers in plain language to a drawing room full of people who needed to hear it: she was genuinely, privately good - and she never once let anyone close enough to know her.
After Evelyn sits at the intersection of women's fiction and magical realism. Its emotional engine is the gap between the love we perform and the love we actually give - and the question of whether understanding that gap, even after it's too late to close it, is a kind of grace.
Warm, bone-dry, and quietly devastating. For readers who believe the ordinary Tuesday was always the occasion.