Review
'Then along comes a novel such as The Forgotten Waltz that blows the whole game right open again. Anne Enright picks up those bright, real-life splinters and blinds you with them. The Forgotten Waltz is an achingly brilliant piece of writing on passion and delusion. Comparisons to Madame Bovary are not overblown, not because it is a wry, clever, philosophical take on adultery - although it is - but because it makes you re-evaluate everything a novel can be. If anything more real is published this year, I will happily submit to a bungled club-foot operation...the garrulous narratorial voice is a joy: funny, companionable...this book is enough to restore your faith in the power of fiction' --The Independent, Viv Groskop, May 2011
`Where the novel compels is in the attendant disquisitions on memory and its rearrangements, both willed and unwilled; the blurring of boundaries, physical and temporal; the vivid presentation of all characters, major and minor; and its funny and forgiving commentary on middle-class aspirational family life in Ireland today'
--Literary Review, Elspeth Barker, May 2011
`This beautifully written, lyrical novel is a portrait of family tensions and the listless half-light in which a mistress must live.' --Sunday Express
'A beautifully observed novel'
--Psychologies
`This beautifully written, lyrical novel is a portrait of family tensions and the listless half-light in which a mistress must live.' --Sunday Express
'A beautifully observed novel' --Psychologies
`a simple tale of adultery, beautifully told...A shrewd and humorous writer...Dancing between humour and pethos, Enright glories in winkling out the truth of a situation and facing reality full on...Humming with naughtiness and warmth, Enrights novel should find a place in every woman's hand-luggage this summer break.'
--The Lady
`Enright has taken a simple plot and produced a touching novel that examines the cost - and the compensations - of love. The heroine is both plausible and sympathetic, while the supporting cast is marshalled with skill, tenderness and humour'
--Mail on Sunday
`Where the novel compels is in the attendant disquisitions on memory and its rearrangements, both willed and unwilled; the blurring of boundaries, physical and temporal; the vivid presentation of all characters, major and minor; and its funny and forgiving commentary on middle-class aspirational family life in Ireland today'
--Literary Review, Elspeth Barker, May 2011
`This beautifully written, lyrical novel is a portrait of family tensions and the listless half-light in which a mistress must live.' --Sunday Express
'A beautifully observed novel'
--Psychologies
`This beautifully written, lyrical novel is a portrait of family tensions and the listless half-light in which a mistress must live.' --Sunday Express
'A beautifully observed novel' --Psychologies
`a simple tale of adultery, beautifully told...A shrewd and humorous writer...Dancing between humour and pethos, Enright glories in winkling out the truth of a situation and facing reality full on...Humming with naughtiness and warmth, Enrights novel should find a place in every woman's hand-luggage this summer break.'
--The Lady
`Enright has taken a simple plot and produced a touching novel that examines the cost - and the compensations - of love. The heroine is both plausible and sympathetic, while the supporting cast is marshalled with skill, tenderness and humour'
--Mail on Sunday
Review
A "Globe and Mail" Best Book
"From the Hardcover edition."
"From the Hardcover edition."
