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The Forgotten Waltz
The Forgotten Waltz
May 9, 2025 12:57 PM

Author:Anne Enright

The Forgotten Waltz

A powerful, moving book of secrets, longing and loss, from the Man Booker Prize-winning author of The Gathering.

If it hadn't been for the child then none of this might have happened.

She saw me kissing her father.

She saw her father kissing me.

The fact that a child got mixed up in it all made us feel that it mattered, that there was no going back.

**Shortlisted for The Orange Prize for Fiction**

'Absolute genius' BBC Radio 4

Reviews

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... This book is enough to restore your faith in the power of fiction

—— Viv Groskop , Independent

An important novel... It is a rare thing: the literary page turner... An acutely tender depiction of the complex familial bonds joining us, a delicate portrait of love, loss and hope, from a formidably talented writer

—— Claire Kilroy , Financial Times

A love story for our times... In a single sentence [Enright] conjures up that violent pendulum swing of emotion that can blow whole worlds apart... This is the great pleasure of reading Enright: her sheer virtuoso control of language, those compact sentences, with their occasional flares of lyrical beauty and emotional force

—— Irish Times

A luminous novel... Haunting, dreamy, sexy and with flashes of salty wit this is one of those novels that you are sorry to see end. It is very much an Irish novel and much of its time but the anatomy of desire and passion are timeless

—— Jennifer Selway , Daily Express

The real pleasure of the book is the dancing, delicious prose

—— Evening Standard

Enright holds you in a story-telling spell. Mesmerising

—— Red

Absolute genius

—— Linda Grant , BBC Radio 4

A brave and unusual variation on a familiar theme... She modulates so finely between comedy and pathos, between psychology and physicality, that she conveys a sense of the richness of lived experience... Anne Enright has taken a great risk in writing this book, but she has brought it off superbly

—— Edmund Gordon , Daily Telegraph

Devastatingly good

—— Marie Claire

Forces us to look in the mirror... It is a discomfiting public examination of conscience, an exposé of our national shortcomings so recently in the limelight

—— Irish Independent

That's the Anne Enright voice all right - wry, disabused, reckless, candid, funny

—— Hermione Lee , Guardian

[Enright's] amazing ability to engage in lyric flights while keeping her feet on the ground, her way of returing to certain intimate details and of making jumpy little jokes, her habit of using colloquial phrasing to moor Grand Statements, and her rushing, exquisitely turned perceptions

—— Leo Robson , New Statesman

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...funny and forgiving

—— Elspeth Barker , Literary Review

The book...succeeds admirably, because Enright's characters are indeed so ordinary and fallible; they could quite easily be us

—— Ross Gilfillan , Daily Mail

This beautifully written, lyrical novel is a portrait of family tensions and the listless half-light in which a mistress must live

—— Jane Clinton , Sunday Express

Enright's prose has a brilliant physicality... Her observations of the Irish boom years are caustic and credible

—— Tom Gatti , The Times

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

—— Max Davidson , Mail on Sunday

A simply and beautifully told tale

—— Lady

A simple tale of adultery and its consequences, told from a female perspective…Enright risks an over-familiarity of the subject matter, but she has brought it off superbly

—— Daily Telegraph

Enright is brilliant on the emotional battlefields and dance floors that exist between men and women… Smartingly funny and profoundly wise

—— Metro

The Forgotten Waltz delicately weaves the personal and political into a wry, tender exploration of family, marriage and the price of passion

—— Sorcha Hamilton , Irish Times

Brave, beautiful and quite brilliant

—— Joseph O’Connor , Irish Independent

A brilliant evocation of an ill-fated extramarital; affair, told with Enright’s customary sharp wit and knack for spotting a love-related cliché

—— Guardian, Holiday Reads:

The latest novel from the Booker Prize winning author has an emotional heft that belies the novel’s slender size

—— Sunday Business Post Ireland

a very human tale about passion, secrets and lies.

—— Reading Matters

An achingly brilliant piece of writing on passion and delusion. It's a pleasure to read from start to finish and reignites our love for fiction

—— Independent
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