Beautiful World, Where Are You

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Sally Rooney: Beautiful World, Where Are You (2021, Faber & Faber, Limited)

English language

Published April 18, 2021 by Faber & Faber, Limited.

ISBN:
978-0-571-36542-5
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4 stars (10 reviews)

10 editions

Not action-packed, but emotional

4 stars

This novel is set in present-day Ireland but it feels as though it was an updated version of a novel from the turn of the twentieth century by the likes of Tolstoy, Joyce, or Dostoyevsky. All of these get mentioned at some point during the story, which I think must be a kind of clue from the author. Of course, many of the social norms from those times are just the opposite now, but the concerns of a young person looking for identity and fellowship among others of their kind are much the same. The disapproval of the Church and of the state are not as heavy as they once were but this does not mean they are irrelevant. There is more openness now to ask what is a good way to organize one's life beyond career advancement and social climbing, but the gap between those struggling and those living …

Tightrope writing

3 stars

Sally Rooney likes to play with fire. She writes an impressive quantity of words about nothing ( what some would call "bird brain" talk) but manages to slip in those incredible insights about life and relationships that keep you wanting more and keep you reading just as you're just about to quit . I'm usually not very tolerant of insignificant chatter but I have to admit that I was hooked in this case. And she achieves that in a very classical structure with an intro, a development and a conclusion.

the writing! but the characters!

4 stars

I don’t have to like the characters in the books I read (and actually as a former EngLit prof, find that way of reading for likeability or relatedness to be super limiting). But having said that, with every single Rooney novel, I struggle with frustration and wanting to shake the characters, especially the young women. I think this is probably the point of it all? This is gorgeously written, especially the third-person chapters describing the characters’ actions etc and the cinematic looking-at-ness of those sections (she tells you insistently what it looks like the characters are feeling from their actions rather than telling you how they feel). But I still wondered the whole time, as I have with Normal and Conversations, why I was reading it.

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Subjects

  • English literature