- Published: 13 June 2023
- ISBN: 9781529115291
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 336
- RRP: $30.00
Iron Curtain
A Love Story
- Published: 13 June 2023
- ISBN: 9781529115291
- Imprint: Vintage
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 336
- RRP: $30.00
Vesna Goldsworthy's masterly novel retains the grace and resilience of literary art while wading deep into the most riveting human drama... Goldsworthy is at once the most impartial and the tenderest of observers, a bold dramatist and a subtle humorist
Rachel Cusk
An extraordinary evocation of two wildly contrasted worlds... Vesna Goldsworthy writes so well!
Michael Frayn
Original and memorable... a profound understanding of the timeless realities of love, betrayal and the desire for revenge
Pat Barker
Gripping... With grace and a dose of forgiveness, Goldsworthy performs a heartbreaking but exhilarating evisceration of the myths by which we live now
Nancy K. Miller
Superb... The divided continent has been at the heart of countless novels over the decades, but few can have been as cleverly crafted or better told than Vesna Goldsworthy's Iron Curtain... Brilliantly written
Nick Rennison, Sunday Times
Timely... Daring... A bittersweet tale of loyalty, love and the siren call of freedom
Rebecca Abrams, Financial Times
Goldsworthy's crisply observed and entertaining novel has serious overtones and poses uncomfortable questions, not least about the supposed superiority of the West
Suzi Feay, Tablet, *Novel of the Week*
A pacy rite-of-passage story that doubles as a portrait of the poisonous legacies of police-state paranoia
Anthony Cummins, Daily Mail
The pages fly by, and Goldsworthy's careful scrutiny brings warmth and sympathy to her tale of belonging and betrayal. Tense, brooding and often hilarious, Iron Curtain finds bright sparks as well as bleakness in the cold war's dying embers
James Stuart, Guardian
This excellent novel is a comedy of manners nevertheless fraught with tension... Goldsworthy captures the human perspective of life in the cold war superbly and sympathetically
Alexander Larman, Observer
A love story that begins in the East and moves to the West. It serves as a timely reminder that the European states once dominated by Soviet ideology were a patchwork of cultures with their own individual histories
Fiona Hughes, Radio Times
Iron Curtain seized me from its first page and I hardly put it down again until I arrived with reluctance to its stunning conclusion... Moving but also irresistibly enjoyable
Megan Nolan
[A] well-observed, witty novel
The Times, *Summer Reads of 2022*
A poignant, bittersweet love story played out across the east-west divide, it challenges set ideas about loyalty, freedom and ideology
Frederick Studemann, Financial Times, *Summer Books 2022*
It would be possible to read library stacks' worth of books about what life on the eastern side of the curtain was like, trying to understand the feeling of the late Soviet Union... Or you could read this book
Jasper Lindell, Canberra Times
Beautifully crafted... Goldsworthy's evocative descriptions of both worlds - the rigid ice of the east and the damp monotony of the west - lend a filmic quality to this layered novel
New Humanist
Witty, poignant and full of surprises - every detail of this cross-cultural story of love and disillusionment rings true.
Clare Chambers
An unflinching brilliant novel about the mental divide between East and West in Europe in the Cold War era.
Tom de Waal, Carnegie Europe Summer Reads
Goldsworthy's perceptive and well-crafted story plays like The Americans as revised by Sally Rooney, with acidic observations worthy of the late Kingsley Amis. By flipping the Cold War script, Goldsworthy comes up with a winner.
Publishers Weekly
Superb
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