Marin Independent Journal

‘Beautiful World’ tackles sex, friendship

- By Malcolm Forbes

Sally Rooney’s “Normal People” was a masterful depiction of first love. Readers of the Irish author’s second novel — and, later, viewers of the acclaimed Hulu series — followed Marianne and Connell coming together and coming undone over the course of four years. Their chemistry was so special that the book’s title seemed to apply to others.

“I did used to think I could read your mind at times,” Connell said. “But maybe that’s normal.” “It’s not,” Marianne assured him.

In her latest novel, “Beautiful World, Where Are You,” Rooney turns her attention once again to romantic entangleme­nts. This time, instead of putting one Irish couple under the spotlight, she reprises the structure of her debut, “Conversati­ons With Friends,” and examines the dynamics of two pairings. She also extends her gaze beyond sexual relations to explore the occasional­ly fraught yet ultimately unbreakabl­e friendship between her two female leads.

These women power the novel. Alice is a 29-year-old writer from Dublin whose books have made her wealthy and famous. However, success has not brought her happiness: She was admitted to a psychiatri­c hospital after suffering a nervous breakdown and now lives alone on the west coast of Ireland.

Her best friend Eileen is an editorial assistant on a literary magazine in Dublin and struggles to make ends meet. Like Alice, she experience­s low moments where she feels like a failure: “It’s so hard to see the point sometimes, when the things in life I think are meaningful turn out to mean nothing, and the people who are supposed to love me don’t.”

Alice attempts to assuage her loneliness by hooking up with Felix through a dating app. Eileen rekindles a spark with childhood friend Simon. Felix works in a shipping warehouse and is prone to getting blindingly drunk; Simon is a senior political adviser and a committed Catholic. After a series of meetups and fallouts, all four gather at Alice’s huge rectory by the sea. There they test the limits of the forces that bind them.

“Beautiful World, Where Are You” is something of a mixed bag. Even if opposites do attract, it is hard to fully believe in Alice and Felix’s blossoming love. Their first date is disastrous. Undaunted, Alice then invites Felix, still a virtual stranger, to accompany her on a promotiona­l trip to Rome. He finds her “weird” and condescend­ing and treats her appallingl­y. He describes himself as “not the most reliable charac

We may have to surrender disbelief in places, but otherwise we marvel as Rooney continues to write convincing­ly and captivatin­gly about human relationsh­ips in all their relatable complexity.

ter going.” And yet still this emotionall­y damaged woman considers him someone worth pursuing.

Rooney also taxes us with the rambling emails Alice and Eileen send one another — correspond­ence that covers a range of topics from politics to plastic, class conflict to early writing systems.

Her narrative becomes

engaging when her characters swap self-absorption for interactio­n. We may have to surrender disbelief in places, but otherwise we marvel as Rooney continues to write convincing­ly and captivatin­gly about human relationsh­ips in all their relatable complexity.

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