Rose Tremain (born August 2, 1943, London, England) is a British novelist whose books often dramatize a moment of truth in the lives of lonely outsiders.
After receiving a degree in English from the University of East Anglia in 1967, Tremain worked for the British Printing Corporation and wrote several nonfiction works about woman suffrage before publishing her first novel, Sadler’s Birthday (1976). This book, which presents the reminiscences of an elderly butler who lives alone in the house he has inherited from his former employers, established Tremain’s reputation as a chronicler of despair and loneliness. In Letter to Sister Benedicta (1978), a middle-aged woman whose family life is unbearable writes to her former teacher, a nun, looking for solace. The Cupboard (1981) explores the relationship between an older, neglected writer and the journalist sent to interview her.
Tremain’s subsequent books move away from the intense focus on one or two characters and toward less-restricted settings. Her novel Restoration (1989; filmed 1995) offers a many-layered historical narrative about the interconnected lives of a group of characters during the reign of Charles II. Sacred Country (1992) relates the picaresque adventures of Mary Ward, who is convinced from the age of six that she is meant to be a boy and spends three decades trying to achieve this goal. Tremain’s subsequent novels included The Way I Found Her (1997); Music & Silence (1999), which won a Whitbread Book Award; The Colour (2003); The Road Home (2007), winner of the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction (later called the Women’s Prize for Fiction); The Gustav Sonata (2016); and Islands of Mercy (2020). She also wrote the short-story collections Evangelista’s Fan, & Other Stories (1994) and The Darkness of Wallis Simpson, and Other Stories (2005) as well as the children’s book Journey to the Volcano (1996). The autobiography Rosie: Scenes from a Vanished Life, which chronicles her childhood, was published in 2018. Tremain was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 2007 and advanced to Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire(DBE) in 2020.