Intermezzo
by
Sally Rooney
Recommended by Dan Cable, Professor of Organisational Behaviour
It’s been billed as “Psychological Fiction” and I agree with that, but what captured me the most were characters that I believed in. I felt I actually knew them, as real humans, so when they made choices in their lives, I was immersed. This is magical to me about writing, the ability to make up characters, then make them act in ways that summon real feelings of connection.
The topic of the book may not sound compelling at first: two brothers, one a successful barrister in Dublin, the other a shy geek chess player who is younger by a decade, are mourning the death of their father. They don’t like each other much. They both have issues with their love lives and their careers. How you see them at the beginning changes a lot by the end of the novel, and you’ll probably gain insights about the complexity of love. But I’m recommending it because by the novel’s close I wanted to hang out with the characters and was sad to remember they’re not real.
Call Number: LIBBY E-BOOKS
ISBN: 9780571365494
Publication Date: 2024