Skip to main content
Gifts from The Morning Star
Stepping back from activism
JENNY FARRELL detects a departure from the political trajectory of Rooney’s previous work
MELANCHOLIC PASTIMES: Lewis Chess Pieces [Paul Hudson/CC]

Intermezzo
Sally Rooney, Faber, £20

IN her latest, fourth novel, Intermezzo, Sally Rooney continues her exploration of intimate relationships, albeit with a shift away from the clear political critique that characterised her earlier works. Its focus lies on what makes personal relationships successful, and, surprisingly, an emphasis on unconditional love as something close to God.

Rooney’s previous novel, Beautiful World, Where Are You, ended with one character stepping back from activism, retreating into a subjective sense of peace and stability – dependent, the reader might think, on sufficient income. That choice felt tentative—perhaps an individual’s decision to pursue personal happiness over political engagement. With Intermezzo, however, this focus on private happiness and detachment from societal ills is presented not as a protagonist’s choice but as a theme that permeates the entire narrative. 

The novel focuses on two brothers, Peter and Ivan Koubek, and their relationships. While both brothers experience obstacles in achieving personal fulfilment, the political elements that once gave the novelist’s protagonists a radical edge are not as prominent. Where we might expect Rooney’s young protagonists to challenge economic precarity or political hypocrisy within contemporary Irish society, this fades into the background as their concerns become far more personal. 

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
American flags representing the 200,000 dead from COVID-19 p
Book Review / 25 March 2025
25 March 2025
SARAH TROTT explores short fictional slices of life in the American midwest from a middle-aged and mostly female perspective
STUDY OF THE ALIENATED WORKER: Joana Santos as Aurora in On
Interview / 18 March 2025
18 March 2025
RITA DI SANTO speaks to Laura Carreira about her study of workers in an Amazon warehouse,  On Falling
LOST IN BOOKS: Fernando Pessoa sculpture by Jean-Michel Folo
Book Review / 31 October 2024
31 October 2024
FIONA O’CONNOR recommends a biography of a Portuguese modernist poet who maintained a philosophical approach to his own being and is best encountered within the playfulness of his writing
Culture / 1 October 2024
1 October 2024
From Argentina, a novel by Federico Falco and a collection of chronicles by Hebe Uhart; and poetry by Belarusian-Argentinean Natalia Litvinova, and Chilean Vicente Huidobro