After You'd Gone

Published in 2000 by Headline Review, it garnered 'international acclaim' and won a Betty Trask Award.

Central to the story is the passionate relationship of Alice with her Jewish partner John, who works in Canary Wharf and is caught up in the 1996 Docklands bombing.

Rogers herself praises the 'crystal-clear prose' and goes on to say "This is a love story and a family saga, but the skill with which it is constructed and written gives startling life to these traditional subjects: feelings of love and grief are rarely so well explored[2] Elizabeth Speller writing in The Guardian is also impressed with the strength of the writing, "what makes this book remarkable is a luminous use of language and imagery which turn Alice's world into one of elements and of sensation; a universe of light, smell, taste, heat and sound.

"[3] Kirkus Reviews concludes "O’Farrell is an astute observer of little behaviors, the telling fidgets and habits of everyday existence, and she's at her best when piecing these together to create a sense of a real life experienced through fiction.

The complex structure works beautifully, communicating the shared and interlocking sufferings of the Raikes women through its carefully worked-out layering of narrative lines.