“Silver's latest is a gorgeous testament to the endurance and depth of familial bonds.”
—BOOKLIST
"At Last charts a rich, fascinating landscape that has been largely ignored by contemporary fiction."
—JENNIFER EGAN, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Candy House
"When Tom and Ruth marry in 1971, little do they consider that they are initiating a connection between their mothers that will deeply affect each other over the decades. I will never forget this smart, wry, gorgeous novel."
—ALICE ELLIOTT DARK, author of Fellowship Point
"No one else working today puts as much human complexity onto the page with such marvelous clarity as Marisa Silver. Whole lives course down the decades in her latest, and every minute of them is conveyed with Silver's signature combination of toughness and grace. The bar is very high, but I think At Last is her finest novel yet."
—LAIRD HUNT, author of Zorrie
"There’s great pleasure in following the breadth of these women’s lives, and the fascinating extended family they come to share. The reader's allegiance shifts with the years; our hearts are opened by tiny moments of bravery, and broken by quiet betrayals. Marisa Silver has built a fictional world I was happy to live inside."
—ANN NAPOLITANO, author of Hello Beautiful
"Here’s the magic of Marisa Silver’s books: they capture, beautifully, not only entire lives but the complex histories that pulse through our country. At Last, which is both a vast and soulfully intimate chronicle of the ties that bind family—and the power of all the decisions one makes across the years—is, quite simply, her best book yet. I was enthralled by its pure grace, by how truthfully it reveals to us our great longings and regrets, and I can’t wait for you to love it as much as I do."
—PAUL YOON, author of The Hive and the Honey
"Alive to what soars within so-called ordinary life, and told in prose which exhilaratingly pursues and seizes the truths of marriage and family, At Last is an astounding achievement."
—MEGHA MAJUMDAR, author of A Burning
One of The New Yorker and Boston Globe's Best Books of the Year
Longlisted for the Joyce Carol Oates Prize
“Silver [allows] the reader sharp glimpses of her characters’ interiority, as well as insight into why we all sometimes refuse to reveal ourselves and hold intimacy at arm’s length.” —The New Yorker
"Gracefully rendered and utterly compelling... Two temperamentally opposite mothers-in-law, Helene and Evelyn, bristle and cope with one another for decades across late 20th century America as their families evolve and expand, fall apart and contract again." —Boston Globe
"[A] series of…vignettes that recall Evan S. Connell’s “Mrs. Bridge” (1959), At Last moves forward in time by focusing on pivotal moments in the characters’ lives over nearly five decades… Taken individually, these moments shine. Taken in full, they quietly devastate." —Wall Street Journal