Berliner Boersenzeitung - Sally Rooney returns with 30-something questions

EUR -
AED 4.224055
AFN 73.034746
ALL 93.912556
AMD 423.509494
ANG 2.059295
AOA 1055.298283
ARS 1652.513696
AUD 1.637006
AWG 2.070333
AZN 1.954332
BAM 1.938266
BBD 2.317733
BDT 141.263308
BGN 1.944825
BHD 0.433739
BIF 3440.203335
BMD 1.150185
BND 1.474263
BOB 7.980803
BRL 5.855363
BSD 1.15079
BTN 108.762098
BWP 15.419509
BYN 3.185978
BYR 22543.626
BZD 2.314463
CAD 1.623049
CDF 2668.429339
CHF 0.921954
CLF 0.025886
CLP 1018.787718
CNY 7.772318
CNH 7.779921
COP 3950.885475
CRC 524.15827
CUC 1.150185
CUP 30.479903
CVE 109.670229
CZK 23.926206
DJF 204.410724
DKK 7.402752
DOP 67.400776
DZD 152.835402
EGP 57.40366
ERN 17.252775
ETB 182.160574
FJD 2.569169
FKP 0.858573
GBP 0.866384
GEL 3.042238
GGP 0.858573
GHS 12.994445
GIP 0.858573
GMD 83.963142
GNF 10095.747706
GTQ 8.771724
GYD 240.722336
HKD 9.014132
HNL 30.706716
HRK 7.532445
HTG 150.290417
HUF 345.802709
IDR 20414.173491
ILS 3.38297
IMP 0.858573
INR 108.47337
IQD 1506.74235
IRR 1581504.374934
ISK 143.002537
JEP 0.858573
JMD 182.003529
JOD 0.815503
JPY 184.332097
KES 148.972166
KGS 100.583404
KHR 4615.109336
KMF 488.828408
KPW 1035.166903
KRW 1738.924442
KWD 0.35437
KYD 0.959024
KZT 561.198313
LAK 25338.575324
LBP 102999.066812
LKR 385.525743
LRD 209.506002
LSL 18.627083
LTL 3.396197
LVL 0.695736
LYD 7.332452
MAD 10.63348
MDL 20.081337
MGA 4830.776941
MKD 61.059454
MMK 2415.32615
MNT 4116.951662
MOP 9.284806
MRU 46.099467
MUR 54.208496
MVR 17.782141
MWK 1996.721456
MXN 19.882477
MYR 4.675277
MZN 73.499243
NAD 18.635202
NGN 1563.239036
NIO 42.108388
NOK 11.060296
NPR 174.018253
NZD 1.990508
OMR 0.442244
PAB 1.15079
PEN 3.925018
PGK 5.046724
PHP 69.44013
PKR 320.0944
PLN 4.195495
PYG 7022.472113
QAR 4.187251
RON 5.183926
RSD 116.25041
RUB 83.930778
RWF 1711.47528
SAR 4.315372
SBD 9.272129
SCR 16.235003
SDG 690.685314
SEK 10.948358
SGD 1.474571
SHP 0.858729
SLE 28.467414
SLL 24118.808572
SOS 657.339385
SRD 42.938737
STD 23806.507286
STN 24.613959
SVC 10.069
SYP 127.132361
SZL 18.629409
THB 37.420695
TJS 10.667696
TMT 4.037149
TND 3.349052
TOP 2.76937
TRY 53.420578
TTD 7.817282
TWD 36.298116
TZS 3019.239041
UAH 51.538512
UGX 4257.48521
USD 1.150185
UYU 46.460109
UZS 13807.970761
VES 685.552123
VND 30279.77031
VUV 136.859249
WST 3.151221
XAF 650.07617
XAG 0.016846
XAU 0.000268
XCD 3.108433
XCG 2.07402
XDR 0.809382
XOF 649.854731
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.462925
ZAR 18.840732
ZMK 10353.037051
ZMW 20.339997
ZWL 370.359101
  • CMSC

    -0.0450

    22.32

    -0.2%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    18.43

    -0.87%

  • RELX

    -0.7900

    32.01

    -2.47%

  • AZN

    -0.8200

    177.89

    -0.46%

  • RBGPF

    -1.7300

    61.14

    -2.83%

  • BP

    -1.0100

    40.14

    -2.52%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    52.15

    -0.13%

  • BTI

    -1.8900

    59.49

    -3.18%

  • NGG

    -1.6000

    80.68

    -1.98%

  • RIO

    -3.0700

    102.67

    -2.99%

  • VOD

    -0.3600

    14.53

    -2.48%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    22.29

    +0.13%

  • JRI

    -0.1900

    12.62

    -1.51%

  • BCC

    -0.7500

    70.81

    -1.06%

  • BCE

    -0.5400

    23.28

    -2.32%

Sally Rooney returns with 30-something questions
Sally Rooney returns with 30-something questions / Photo: Amy Sussman - GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA/AFP

Sally Rooney returns with 30-something questions

Irish author Sally Rooney, hailed as the "voice of a generation" after the runaway success of "Normal People", examines modern love in all its glory and friction in her fourth novel "Intermezzo" released next week.

Text size:

The book, out on Tuesday, includes all the elements of Rooney's hugely popular oeuvre: keen observations on relationships, spiky, realistic dialogues played out in Dublin houses, erotic scenes and existential conversations on the patriarchy and capitalism.

Having already created a number of striking female characters, the story focuses on two estranged brothers, Peter and Ivan, who come together in the weeks after their father's death, and the romantic relationships they forge in a delicate period of mourning.

Six years after her debut novel "Conversations with Friends" (2017), the characters are now thirty-somethings like the author, and agonise over questions of motherhood and the climate crisis.

Rooney's pared-back and realistic style has also evolved, with precise dialogues dipping into vivid, internal monologues.

"I feel like the older I get the more freedom I have to write about a greater range of life experiences," the 33-year-old author told The Guardian in an interview.

- 'Private person' -

The publicity-shy Irish author, who grew up in the small town of Castlebar in County Mayo, was not prepared for the success of her second novel "Normal People" (2018), with its 2020 BBC television adaptation exploding in popularity during the lockdown.

Rooney has enjoyed a rare literary breakthrough into the mainstream, speaking to the angst of the times and capturing the ways in which "millennials" and internet-generations navigate friendships, romantic connections and family relations.

Her books have been cast by social media spaces like "BookTok" into a genre termed "sad girl lit" -- a term Rooney says she is unfamiliar with -- centring young women with few material problems but who are fraught with internal turmoil.

She has won praise from the likes of Barack Obama and Taylor Swift.

In 2022, Rooney was included in Time magazine's 100 most influential people list, described as a "voice of a generation" and the "Snapchat Salinger" -- a tag that she is eager to distance herself from.

The success of "Normal People" felt "too much", she told the Guardian. "I don't want to be the centre of attention like that ever again," she added.

Rooney still struggles with her notoriety, watched closely by millions of fans but also detractors, who deem her writing "simple" and "overrated".

With her unostentatious style and brunette bangs, she gives few interviews, has stopped doing book tours, and says she is awkward when asked to pose for photos.

"I feel a lot of anxiety about my privacy and the privacy of my family and loved ones... I'm a very private person and I like to go unnoticed," Rooney told the Irish Times, adding that she sometimes regretted not writing under a pseudonym like Italian writer Elena Ferrante.

- Marxist -

With five literary prizes and millions of copies sold, Rooney hopes to break free of the label of the "young novelist".

After 10 years in Dublin and a stint in New York, she now lives with her husband -- a maths professor whom she met during university at Trinity College, Dublin -- in the peaceful Irish countryside, near where she grew up.

Rooney is open about being a Marxist, her politics seeping into the wry commentary by her fictional characters on topics ranging from global wars to Dublin's housing crisis.

In 2021, she refused to allow her third book, "Beautiful World, Where Are You?" to be translated into Hebrew by an Israeli publishing house due to her stance on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and in support of the BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) movement.

Three years on, she says she will not "stay silent in the face of genocide".

"The horrors unfolding in Gaza feel to me like a turning point in history. How are we allowing this to happen?", Rooney told the Irish Times.

Rooney has always denied writing autobiographical works but many have seen her alter ego in the character of Alice, the young novelist in her third book who struggles to come to terms with her fame and takes refuge in a small coastal town in Ireland.

"There is a sense of having lived a lot of life very quickly, in quite a compressed sort of time frame", Rooney told Vogue when "Beautiful World" was published. "I think the book dramatises some of those challenges."

(K.Müller--BBZ)