And so I don't think there could be higher stakes than what we see in this election." PEOPLE's Best Books of September 2024: Sally Rooney’s Intermezzo and Memoirs from Kenny G, Connie Chung and ...
PEOPLE staffers matched up Halloween candy and books based on plot points, characters, overall vibes and in at least one case, the allure of a good pun. See our picks below!
It is no surprise that this year’s presidential election has left the United States in quite a precarious position — a precarity that has inevitably made its way to NYU. Members of our community view ...
Sally Rooney’s newest novel, “Intermezzo,” was released on September 24, introducing its story with a quote by Austrian philosopher, Ludwig Wittgenstein: “But don’t you feel grief now? (But aren’t you ...
The popular, critically acclaimed Irish author’s new novel is more ambitious than her previous works ...
Once again, Sally Rooney does what she does best: writing about nothing, while also writing about everything. Intermezzo, her fourth and latest novel, follows her previous path of exploring the ...
“Intermezzo,” Sally Rooney’s newest novel, explores love and loneliness. Prying open the minds of her characters, Rooney inspects the barriers of grief, pride and fear that drive us apart despite our ...
Nevertheless, the Rooney tidal wave continues to sweep the literary landscape after her fourth novel “Intermezzo.” Sitting on the longer side of Rooney’s work at 437 pages, the book braids the lives ...
Avoiding engaging in the practical formalities of contemporary throupledom, instead lingering in the excitement of its possibilities, is the path that Sally Rooney chooses in her Intermezzo.
For Irish novelist Sally Rooney, questions are often left unanswered. At the heart of Intermezzo, her newest release, is the question of what it means to love. And not in the erotic sense of love, ...
Two years later, I see reviews of her newest release, “Intermezzo,” that echo the same sentiment. But I find myself questioning this widely held point of view. Does “Intermezzo” actually ...