Elizabeth Jane Howard (born March 26, 1923, London, England—died January 2, 2014, Bungay, Suffolk) was a British writer of novels and shorter fiction who was praised for her deft characterizations of alienated people and her sensitivity to the nuances of family relationships.
Howard worked as an actress in repertory theatre in Devon, England, and at Stratford-upon-Avon, and during World War II she was a broadcaster for the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC). After the war she worked as an editor.
Howard’s writing was acclaimed for its technique as well as for its evocative, tightly drawn scenes delineating tensions and secrets between parents and children and between spouses. Her first novel, The Beautiful Visit (1950), won the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize. It was followed by The Long View (1956), The Sea Change (1959), After Julius (1965), and Something in Disguise (1969). The last two were later adapted as television plays for which Howard wrote the scripts. She was perhaps best known for the semiautobiographical novels known as the Cazalet Chronicles—The Light Years (1990), Marking Time (1991), Confusion (1993), Casting Off (1995), and All Change (2013)—the first two of which served as the basis for a 2001 BBC TV miniseries.
Howard’s other novels include Odd Girl Out (1972), Getting It Right (1982; film 1989), Falling (1999; film 2005), and Love All (2008). Among her works of short fiction are We Are for the Dark (1951), a collection of ghost stories, and Mr. Wrong (1975), a volume of collected short stories.
In addition to writing fiction, Howard edited The Lover’s Companion (1978) and Green Shades: An Anthology of Plants, Gardens, and Gardeners (1991). She also composed scripts for television, including episodes of Upstairs, Downstairs. Howard had a highly publicized love life, most notably a turbulent 18-year marriage (1965–83) to her third husband, novelist Kingsley Amis. In 2000 she was made a Commander of the British Empire (CBE). Her memoir, Slipstream, was published two years later.