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Intermezzo: A Novel Hardcover – September 24, 2024
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AN INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER | A National Indie Bestseller
Short-listed for the An Post Irish Book Awards Novel of the Year
Finalist for the Barnes and Noble Book of the Year
Named a Best Book of the Year and a Critics’ Pick by The New York Times
Named an Essential Read by The New Yorker
Named a Best Book of the Year by The Washington Post, Time, Financial Times, Vogue, The Guardian, Harper’s Bazaar, Vox, The Times (UK), Apple Books, and more
A USA Today, People, and Associated Press Top 10 Book of the Year
One of Barack Obama’s favorite books of 2024
One of Chicago Public Library’s Favorite Books of the Year
An exquisitely moving story about grief, love, and family―but especially love―from the global phenomenon Sally Rooney.
Aside from the fact that they are brothers, Peter and Ivan Koubek seem to have little in common.
Peter is a Dublin lawyer in his thirties―successful, competent, and apparently unassailable. But in the wake of their father’s death, he’s medicating himself to sleep and struggling to manage his relationships with two very different women―his enduring first love, Sylvia, and Naomi, a college student for whom life is one long joke.
Ivan is a twenty-two-year-old competitive chess player. He has always seen himself as socially awkward, a loner, the antithesis of his glib elder brother. Now, in the early weeks of his bereavement, Ivan meets Margaret, an older woman emerging from her own turbulent past, and their lives become rapidly and intensely intertwined.
For two grieving brothers and the people they love, this is a new interlude―a period of desire, despair, and possibility; a chance to find out how much one life might hold inside itself without breaking.
- Print length464 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherFarrar, Straus and Giroux
- Publication dateSeptember 24, 2024
- Dimensions5.8 x 1.45 x 8.55 inches
- ISBN-100374602638
- ISBN-13978-0374602635
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From the Publisher




Editorial Reviews
Review
“There is so much relief . . . in turning to a Sally Rooney novel: taking the weight of her elegant, deeply felt sentences; feeling how much control she has over the words she’s using; how strongly she believes that they should be as beautiful as she can make them. At last, the chance to relax in the presence of someone who knows what she’s doing.”
―Constance Grady, Vox
“Ms. Rooney has achieved a neat trick: She is considered the trendiest of novelists, though she writes in a traditional comic form . . . Her characters are distinct individuals whose names and actions are easy to recall, even years after reading the books.”
―B. D. McClay, Wall Street Journal
“The depths Rooney plumbs are idiosyncratically hers. In Intermezzo, Rooney brilliantly and hypnotically creates a universe parallel to the worlds she has created in three previous novels.”
―Michael Pearson, New York Journal of Books
“On a construction level, it’s Sally Rooney at her finest and most controlled . . . To discount the recurrence of certain themes and characterizations across her novels as unoriginal is to overlook the profundity of this novel . . . Again and again, Rooney’s novels pose questions about what love is and how it shapes our lives . . . If Intermezzo is any indication, the author’s literary finesse grows with each new novel.”
―Cait O’Neill, Chicago Review of Books
“Rooney zooms in on these brothers with prose that is precise and rhythmic, her long paragraphs transmitting the winding nature of their inner worlds, how thoughts repeat and morph and collide . . . It’s simple and yet complex; meticulous but alive; funny but deeply sad. It’s Sally Rooney’s best novel yet.”
―Mari Cohen, Jewish Currents
“There are moments of real poignancy and the two men’s hurt and grief, close to the surface, is often painful to read . . . This feels like a more mature novel―and in my opinion, [Rooney’s] best yet. There’s more introspection here, more vulnerability from the characters, and this allows a greater connection . . . Tender and true.”
―Joanne Finney, Good Housekeeping
“Rooney proves that she can cover more ground than what the literary world expects from her . . . Intermezzo is a powerful rejoinder to Rooney’s skeptics.”
―Tisya Mavuram, The American Prospect
“Intermezzo, [Rooney’s] fourth novel, is her most fully developed and moving yet . . . Intermezzo propels you to its well-earned, moving climax with nary a false move.”
―Heller McAlpin, NPR
“Kaleidoscopically beautiful and intimately human . . . To read a Sally Rooney novel is to grip humanity in the palm of your hand, and Intermezzo is no different.”
―Clare Mulroy, USA Today
“Figuring out how to coexist, perhaps even how to love each other, will be the primary challenge [Peter and Ivan] face in Intermezzo. Their relationship is a microcosm of the novel’s interest in learning to live with difference―not just the kind that exists between individuals but also the warring factions that exist within each of them. And, of course, the most fundamental difference of all: that of life versus death.”
―Jess Bergman, The Nation
“In her astutely intimate style, Rooney wades through the convoluted emotions that follow tragedy: certainly heartache, but also relief and longing, guilt and joy, all on the cusp of transformation . . . She teases out near-ruptured emotions never fully felt by the conscience, untethering them from reality for our voyeuristic pleasure . . . In the tense, messy contradictions of communal grief, Rooney weaves together beautiful whole cloth.”
―Curtis Yee, Associated Press
“What’s fascinating about Rooney’s more recent attempts is how attuned she is to every social tightrope that constrains what we might have imagined would be free adulthood . . . There’s something brilliant and refreshing in Rooney’s choice to follow the private love affairs of two siblings once so closely connected . . . It’s a pleasure, this time, to get under the skin and into the compassionate private realities of these brothers who misperceive each other as villains.”
―Lillian Fishman, The Washington Post
“Wise, resonant and witty . . . There is so much restraint and melancholy profundity in her prose that when she allows the flood gates to open, the parched reader is willing to be swept out to sea . . . Rooney has an exquisite perceptiveness and a zest for keeping us reading . . . Intermezzo wears its heart on its sleeve.”
―Dwight Garner, The New York Times
“The formal experiments are never idle but always at the service of a desire for emotional precision, for a more satisfactory rendering of the boundless complexity of the inner life . . . It is no small part of Rooney’s achievement in her latest novel that she portrays physical desire with tact and tenderness, without giving in to soft-focus sentimentalism . . . This bold, adventurous and captivating novel is a major addition to a body of work that never fails to surprise and engage.”
―Michael Cronin, The Irish Times
“Intermezzo is exquisite . . . It’s as tender and lovely as you could ask for, and beneath the elegant rise and fall of Rooney’s oceanic sentences, the waters go deep.”
―Constance Grady, Vox
“Intermezzo is perfect―truly wonderful―a tender, funny page-turner about the derangements of grief, and Rooney’s richest treatment yet of messy romantic entanglements . . . She leans fully into her gifts here: more characters, more complication, ‘more life,’ as Margaret thinks . . . Is there a better novelist at work right now?”
―Anthony Cummins, The Observer
“That divide between what you believe and how you behave is one of the great themes of Intermezzo . . . This is new and deeper territory for Rooney . . . Intermezzo is in many ways a more truthful book . . . The work of an artist who is continually trying out new techniques and continually growing.”
―Laura Miller, Slate
“[Rooney’s] most mature and moving book to date . . . I read it in a state of rapture―and relief. By rediscovering what the one thing the novel uniquely excels at―inwardness―Rooney shows she can tune into her characters’ thoughts and catch them in the act of realising important things about themselves. Her work is much better for it.”
―Johanna Thomas-Corr, The Sunday Times
“Something big has shifted here . . . [Rooney] has also set out to probe something deeper and more enduring, more universally human: grief itself . . . The way she supplies tidy closure, even as she subverts it, is a testament to her skill as a novelist.”
―Amy Weiss-Meyer, The Atlantic
“Intermezzo reaffirms Rooney’s ability to capture the thrill and desperation of blooming romance, and to portray a microcosm of human existence with precision and insight.”
―Michelle Cyca, The Globe and Mail
“On finishing, I reflected: what would it be to hold a book with a soul? I felt I had. I felt changed, and utterly the same, the way it feels to read Larkin, or Tolstoy; felt, that for the time spent reading Intermezzo, I had gone more deeply into the world, reattuned to its networked thrum of pleasures, miseries, worries, and erotics that I might already have been aware of―but dully . . . We see Sally Rooney discovering the full potential of her prowess: to attend finely to the world around her, to find love in its every complexity having done so, to offer those findings sincerely to others.”
―Jo Hamya, The Independent
“I take this to be the modest provocation of Rooney’s novels: the idea that love is real precisely because it is a product, one created by social conventions, by market forces, by systems of violence, and, behind all of this, by human beings themselves . . . In recent years, Rooney has flirted with the idea that the novel, by asking us to love fictional people that will ‘never love us in return,’ provides readers with a unique opportunity to practice a kind of love for one’s fellow man.”
―Andrea Long Chu, New York
“Her gifts are clear: writing realistic dialogue and creating believable characters; narrative economy and instinctive pacing; capturing the way we live as it moves and changes; depicting emotion. She has a particularly deft sense of the writer’s role in a political landscape . . . Rooney’s novels stand for the notion that ordinary people should also be allowed the tumults and comforts of an emotional life, along with a sense that their existence is important because it is precious to the people they love.”
―Joanna Biggs, London Review of Books
“On the one hand, Intermezzo is a knotted, romantic melodrama that offers extensive insight into the rattled neuroses and intimate desires of its characters along with a substantial array of steamy love scenes. On the other hand, it’s a layered book about the displacement of grief and the noise of modern life. In both respects, Rooney skillfully keeps her finger on the pulse of characters . . . Intermezzo is studded with shimmering moments of pastoral stillness.”
―Lauren LeBlanc, The Boston Globe
“[Rooney] examines modern love in all its glory and friction . . . Rooney's pared-back and realistic style has also evolved, with precise dialogues dipping into vivid, internal monologues.”
―Clara Lalanne, Barron’s
“For all the griefs and regrets in [Intermezzo], all the misreadings and mistakes, as the characters try to figure out what they feel, we never lose sight of their capacity for love. If Rooney’s work has a guiding belief, I think it’s something such as this: no one is ever truly alone. Some might see that as obvious, a truism. Others would call it a reason to live.”
―Cal Revely-Calder, The Telegraph
“Mature and profound, Intermezzo feels like a culmination of everything she has done before . . . A melancholic marvel; what is easily her best novel yet.”
―Anna Bonet, iNews
“[Rooney’s] most ambitious book yet, with a notable change in style . . . Though [Intermezzo] circles Rooney’s familiar themes―sex and romance, female illness, former whiz kids facing adult irrelevance―the work is deeper and more tender.”
―Erin Somers, Air Mail
“Intermezzo is an accomplished continuation of the writing that made Rooney a global phenomenon. It’s also more philosophically ambitious, stylistically varied, disturbing at times and altogether stranger.”
―Alexandra Harris, The Guardian
“Intermezzo sees Rooney return to exceptional form with a novel as clever as her 2017 debut Conversations with Friends, and as engrossing as its 2018 follow-up Normal People . . . Love, as Rooney depicts it here, is a moral proposition, complete with obligations for solicitude and responsibility.”
―Shahidha Bari, Financial Times
“Intermezzo is scattered with the little gifts of psychological and emotional observation that are the most cherishable aspects of Rooney’s talent.”
―James Marriott, The Times
“Fascinating and delicate . . . The sheer amount of human relationships and dynamics, like in all of her previous novels, gives a wide range of conversations and thoughtful dialogues. Readers will want to read it again and again to catch every sly nuance.”
―Abby Sliva, The Minnesota Star Tribune
“Come for the romance; stay for the meaning of life, of which, of course, love is a fundamental part.”
―Martin Doyle, The Irish Times
“The arrival of a new Sally Rooney novel is always cause for celebration; there is simply no other novelist chronicling the early adulthood of disaffected youth in the 21st century with more care and compassion . . . In Intermezzo she broadens her scope and diverts from the casually complex conversational tone . . . The book rewards the effort.”
―Chloe Schama, Vogue
“Stylistically daring, emotionally explosive, and endlessly wise, this is Rooney’s best work yet.”
―Charley Burlock, Oprah Daily (Best of Fall)
“[Intermezzo] might be her best yet: a tale of depth and grand sweep, an understated study of characters caught circling the margin of some great and unknown thing, and a diversion of pure enjoyment, too. Rooney’s title tells us these brothers, in their love and fury for one another, are at an in-between moment, as she carefully, brilliantly writes them out of it.”
―Booklist (starred review)
“Bestseller Rooney returns with a boldly experimental and emotionally devastating story of estrangement . . . The novel’s deliberate pacing veers from the propulsiveness of Normal People and the deep character work contrasts with the topicality of Beautiful World, but in many ways this feels like Rooney’s most fully realized work, especially as she channels the modernist styles of James Joyce and Virginia Woolf . . . Even the author’s skeptics are liable to be swept away by this novel’s forceful currents of feeling.”
―Publishers Weekly (starred review)
“Rooney has struck a satisfying blend of the things she’s best at―sensitively rendered characters, intimacies, consideration of social and philosophical issues―with newer moves . . . The characters remain reach-out-and-touch-them real . . . Her grandmaster status remains intact.”
―Kirkus Reviews
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Farrar, Straus and Giroux (September 24, 2024)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 464 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0374602638
- ISBN-13 : 978-0374602635
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.8 x 1.45 x 8.55 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,872 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #92 in Coming of Age Fiction (Books)
- #135 in Family Life Fiction (Books)
- #277 in Literary Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

SALLY ROONEY was born in the west of Ireland in 1991. Her work has appeared in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Granta and The London Review of Books. Winner of the Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award in 2017, she is the author of Conversations with Friends and the editor of the Irish literary journal The Stinging Fly.
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find this novel deeply engaging with powerful love story elements that explore the messiness of life and family. The book receives positive feedback for its readability, character development, thought-provoking content, and heartfelt emotional depth, with one customer noting its beautiful perspective on grief. However, the writing style receives mixed reactions, with some praising the stunning writing while others find it not readable. Moreover, the plot receives criticism for being mired in boring problems and lacking a compelling storyline.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers appreciate the romance in the book, describing it as a powerful love story that explores the messiness of life and family, with relatable relationships.
"...Takes you on a journey and at the same time it’s sensual and coy. Deliberate and intriguing." Read more
"This is an interesting book about many subjects; love, sibling rivalry, father-son relationship, fear of "what will people say", etc...." Read more
"...Love is love is love❤️" Read more
"...provoking and beautifully written, an introspective one rarely sees on romantic and family relationships, sex and grief, told from the male..." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, with one mentioning they couldn't stop reading it.
"It’s a different style of writing for sure . Took me a min but it was worth it . Takes you on a journey and at the same time it’s sensual and coy...." Read more
"...The penmanship is different and needs to be getting used. Overall, a great novel." Read more
"...I love this book and I especially love the ending whose resolution of the storyline was as powerful and meaningful as the endings of Shakespeare's..." Read more
"I could not stop reading this book, I read it in one day, and late into the night...." Read more
Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them deeply engaging, with one customer noting it's about troubled brilliant people.
"...I found self-reflection by characters captivating. I am no expert on Catholicism, but the Irish guilt comes across heavily in the story...." Read more
"...the writing style made me feel dropped into the minds and emotions of the characters...." Read more
"...But - too long. Should have tightened it up - endless dithering between the characters." Read more
"Such great writing. Excellent descriptions of the characters, easily creatively uniquely understood. Rooney is hitting her stride as a mature writer...." Read more
Customers find the book thought-provoking, with many noting it provides food for personal reflection, and one customer describing it as a wonderfully erudite lecture.
"...Deliberate and intriguing." Read more
"This is an interesting book about many subjects; love, sibling rivalry, father-son relationship, fear of "what will people say", etc...." Read more
"...Don’t really want to do it again. Otherwise, well written and thoughtful" Read more
"...the ending whose resolution of the storyline was as powerful and meaningful as the endings of Shakespeare's beautiful romantic comedies like "A..." Read more
Customers describe the book as deeply heartfelt and heart-breaking, with one customer noting how it provides a beautiful perspective on grief.
"...I really enjoyed it! It's thought provoking and tender!..." Read more
"...the author manages to plunge into the minds of both brothers, conveying their feelings, frustrations, disappointments, guilt, and a different way of..." Read more
"...In wonderful detail, the novel shares the brothers' introspection about themselves, their relationship with each other, and their efforts to develop..." Read more
"...main characters are alive and so deeply drawn that we really inhabit their conscious (and subconscious) lives...." Read more
Customers find the pacing of the book incredibly moving and raw, with one customer noting its beautiful narrative of internal thoughts and feelings, while another describes it as messy in the best way.
"...Took me a min but it was worth it . Takes you on a journey and at the same time it’s sensual and coy. Deliberate and intriguing." Read more
"...is present in this book, which is a beautiful narrative of both internal thoughts and feelings and external actions and deeds, especially sexual..." Read more
"...Here and gone.” Life is raw and messy and lovely. This book captured all of life and reminds the reader it ok to feel it." Read more
"...unusual prose style and I found it both extraordinarily perceptive and moving." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the writing style of the book, with some praising its stunning and beautiful prose while others find it not so readable.
"It’s a different style of writing for sure . Took me a min but it was worth it . Takes you on a journey and at the same time it’s sensual and coy...." Read more
"...The penmanship is different and needs to be getting used. Overall, a great novel." Read more
"...Don’t really want to do it again. Otherwise, well written and thoughtful" Read more
"...She is indeed a serious writer, and "Intermezzo" is vivid proof of that...." Read more
Customers find the plot of the book unengaging, describing it as boring and mired in uninteresting problems.
"...to rate it a five (maybe even five plus), but I was very disappointed in the ending...." Read more
"The item arrived well, but the book is pretty boring for me, and I love all her other books." Read more
"...put this book down twenty times early-mid way through for lack of a compelling plot...." Read more
"...The Ivan chapters are good. The Peter chapters grow tiresome...." Read more
Reviews with images

Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on April 16, 2025It’s a different style of writing for sure . Took me a min but it was worth it . Takes you on a journey and at the same time it’s sensual and coy. Deliberate and intriguing.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2025This is an interesting book about many subjects; love, sibling rivalry, father-son relationship, fear of "what will people say", etc. I found self-reflection by characters captivating. I am no expert on Catholicism, but the Irish guilt comes across heavily in the story. Every one feels guilty and unhappy because of not being fair and just to others. The penmanship is different and needs to be getting used. Overall, a great novel.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2024While I very much liked the idea of this story I was frustrated with Peter's stream of consciousness chapters. Been there, read Faulkner. Don’t really want to do it again. Otherwise, well written and thoughtful
- Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2024In her 2022 T.S. Eliot lecture at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin on the centenary of the publication of James Joyce's "Ulysses", Sally Rooney traced the origins of the novel in English back to women, not men, writing in the 18th century. This wonderfully erudite lecture published in the Paris Review is available online, and I recommend it to the attention of those who think Ms. Rooney is not a " serious" writer. She is indeed a serious writer, and "Intermezzo" is vivid proof of that. She said in an interview that she had learned much from the novels of Jane Austen and Henry James. That same moral seriousness is present in this book, which is a beautiful narrative of both internal thoughts and feelings and external actions and deeds, especially sexual deeds, in the interlinked lives of 2 brothers and 3 women in their lives. Sally Rooney used the term " relational novel" to describe books centered on the connections men and women sometimes succeed and sometimes fail to establish between each other. She then went on to show that "Ulysses" is such a relational novel. Her novel recalls not only Joyce but also Virginia Woolf. If you like the writers I have mentioned, you will love "Intermezzo".
In a recent interview with the New York Times, Sally Rooney was asked about "big" issues like climate change and why she didn't focus on such topics rather than the relationships of Irish millenials in 21st century Dublin. (This is NOT an American novel please, and its characters and sensitivities are thoroughly Irish.) Ms. Rooney said that yes these larger issues are important, but that people had to live and needed a reason to live and their connections with other people on the micro not the macro scale provide them with hope and motivation to live. I love this book and I especially love the ending whose resolution of the storyline was as powerful and meaningful as the endings of Shakespeare's beautiful romantic comedies like "A Midsummer Night's Dream". The *end* of a story is the most important part. What a dreadful feeling when the author drops the ball at this crucial moment. Have no fear, gentle readers; when you reach the end of this wonderful book, you will be uplifted and you will feel that the hours spent on this reading journey have been well worth your valuable time.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 3, 2025We're reading Intermezzo for our book club!
I really enjoyed it! It's thought provoking and tender! If traditional relationships worked there wouldn't be so many dysfunctional family relationships. Love is love is love❤️
- Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2025I could not stop reading this book, I read it in one day, and late into the night. Initially, the writing style was a little hard to get the hang of— who is saying what? What are thoughts and what’s being said out loud. But then, I got into the groove, and it makes total sense. I only add this because initially I only started reading this because it’s a book club selection. And I thought— oh no, I gotta slog thru this? But then it flows and you feel like you really understand each point of view. I am definitely going to read more Sally Rooney books!
- Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2025Thought provoking and beautifully written, an introspective one rarely sees on romantic and family relationships, sex and grief, told from the male perspective by a female writer. I am impressed (now I want to know what my husband thinks of it…unfortunately, my book club is all women.)
Top reviews from other countries
- booksbooksbooksReviewed in Singapore on October 17, 2024
1.0 out of 5 stars Creased and folded book
Book came in creased and with folds on the corners and stains
booksbooksbooksCreased and folded book
Reviewed in Singapore on October 17, 2024
Images in this review
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MetztliReviewed in Mexico on January 11, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars De lo mejor de la autora
De las mejores historias escritas por Sally
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Zülal ErdoğanReviewed in Turkey on December 27, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Sorunsuz kargo
Kargo hızlı ve sağlam geldi. Kitap orijinal, buruşukluk vs yok
- SuchitraReviewed in India on December 15, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
This book became dear to me.just finished reading this book. The whole story has a melancholy tone. It’s about two brothers ivan and peter and how they navigate their lives and grief after losing their father. It explores the complexities of the sibling relationships and love life. At the beginning i just found ivan so relatable and adorable and disliked peter. But as the story progresses we get to know how that peter is just exhausted and all alone. Personally i found many situations and the emotions relatable and familiar, it resonated with me deeply. Halfway through i became fond of the characters. I became more interested in peters pov. And sure at times I didn’t like ivans thoughts and actions especially towards his brother, but i understood How he just became an adult and figuring out the complexities of life. At the end i ended up rooting for peter and just wanted to give him a hug. The some of the events in this story happened in my life and also having similar sibling dynamic, i really was invested in this book till the end. I just wanted two more chapters at the end, because i felt the story just ended abruptly, although not dissatisfying.
I definitely recommend it!
Suchitra⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Reviewed in India on December 15, 2024
I definitely recommend it!
Images in this review
- Vlad TheladReviewed in Canada on November 8, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Reaching new heights
Literary success is filled with first time wonders, say an outstanding novel, followed by never-quite-as-good second, third or more works. Sally Rooney’s first two novels shattered this premise as they were both excellent. The third, alas, was not. Then comes this one, Intermezzo, and I picked it up with a bit of scepticism as promotional great reviews usually accompany the new releases of already established bestseller authors. Well, not only is this book on par with her first two, but it also reaches new heights as Rooney revisits already familiar elements of the lives of Irish millennials through a fascinating host of characters. This time she adds a more experimental prose to her already powerful arsenal of describing and narrating tools, resulting in a vivid, engaging, and compelling book. As the cliché goes, it is hard to put this one down.