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The In-Between

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The tender, sensual and moving new novel from the award-winning and bestselling author of The Slap and Damascus. A compelling contemporary love story between two middle-aged men, told with grace, heart and wisdom.

No life is simple, and no life is without sorrow. No life is perfect.

Two middle-aged men meet on an internet date. Each has been scarred by a previous relationship; each has his own compelling reasons for giving up on the idea of finding love.

But still they both turn up for the dinner, feel the spark and the possibility of something more. Feel the fear of failing again, of being hurt and humiliated and further annihilated by love.

How can they take the risk of falling in love again. How can they not?

A tender, affecting novel of love, of hope, of forgiveness by one of our most fearless and truthful interpreters of the human heart, the acclaimed bestselling author of The Slap and Damascus.

Praise for Christos

'I've admired the risk and power of all his novels, but this might be the riskiest of all—so personal, so delicate and true—and I love it.' — Charlotte Wood on 7 1/2

'A scorching, mythic work with a heart of the sweetest intimacy.'— Helen Garner on 7 1/2

'The audacity of Tsiolkas is still a thrill. And, dare one say it, necessary.' — Nigel Featherstone on 7 1/2

'Tsiolkas has proved himself a heroic writer, ready to enter the fray and wrestle with intractable moral and political questions. A powerful parable of our times.' — The Saturday Paper on Damascus

'Every time I was 10 pages in a new book, I thought, "It's not Damascus", and put it aside for another day . . .' — Stephen Romei, Weekend Australian on Damascus

'I finished Barracuda on a moved, elated, immersed . . . This is the work of a superb writer who has completely mastered his craft but lost nothing of his fiery spirit in so doing. It is a big achievement.' — The Guardian

'Once in a while a novel comes along that reminds me why I love to The Slap is such a book . . . Tsiolkas throws open the window on society, picks apart its flaws, embraces its contradictions and recognises its beauty, all the time asking the reader, Whose side are you on? Honestly, one of the three or four truly great novels of the new millennium.' — John Boyne, author of The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas

'The Slap is nothing short of a tour de force, and it confirms Christos Tsiolkas's reputation as one of the most significant contemporary storytellers at work today . . . Here is a novel of immense power and scope.' — Colm Tóibín, author of Brooklyn

400 pages, ebook

First published October 31, 2023

About the author

Christos Tsiolkas

36 books928 followers
Christos Tsiolkas is the author of nine novels: Loaded, which was made into the feature film Head-On, The Jesus Man and Dead Europe,which won the 2006 Age Fiction Prize and the 2006 Melbourne Best Writing Award. He won Overall Best Book in the Commonwealth Writers' Prize 2009, was shortlisted for the 2009 Miles Franklin Literary Award, long listed for the 2010 Man Booker Prize and won the Australian Literary Society Gold Medal for The Slap, which was also announced as the 2009 Australian Booksellers Association and Australian Book Industry Awards Books of the Year.
Barracuda is his fifth novel. Merciless Gods (2014) and Damascus (2019) followed.
He is also a playwright, essayist and screen writer. He lives in Melbourne.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 216 reviews
Profile Image for TheBookWarren.
490 reviews160 followers
April 23, 2024
3.25 ⭐️ — A very well written novel, that may have some pretentiousness in parts, but is overall, every bit a literary experience that is clearly written by a Writer whom knows their own voice almost too well. Tsiolkas is a truly talented Australian Literary Fiction writer that is building one of the most vaunted CV’s of all modern Aussie writers with another solid effort here. It definitely could’ve been a real gem of a read this one, but I felt as though it laboured a little in parts, especially through the middle, and played it a little safe. A great read though!

In Christos Tsiolkas’s latest literary endeavour, "The In-Between", one finds themselves diving into a narrative as deep & turbulent as the Aegean, yet occasionally as perplexing as a labyrinth without a Minotaur. Tsiolkas, who has consistently wielded his pen like a sculptor chiseling raw marble, somewhat fumbles here, leaving us with a protagonist as cracked and fissured as an ancient fresco.

The novel revolves around the life of Manny, a middle-aged man wrestling with the spectral chains of his dual heritage, Greek and Australian, and his bisexuality, entangled amidst the fading light of his mother’s life. The premise promises a rich tapestry of internal conflict and cultural examination, yet it sprawls often into meandering byways that lead, regrettably, more often to confusion than to climax.

Tsiolkas’s prose, usually as sharp as a butcher’s cleaver, here sometimes dulls to the bluntness of a spoon. One can appreciate his intent to carve out the in-betweens of identity, the grey areas of human sexuality and the diasporic dualities. However, the execution is akin to a gymnast attempting a quadruple backflip but only managing a double; the ambition is commendable but the outcome is underwhelming.

Yet, "The In-Between" is not without its lustrous threads that cut-through the underwhelming with a sharp foray or jab to the jugular. The dialogues, when they shine, do so brilliantly, reflecting Tsiolkas’s uncanny ear for the vernacular. These are moments where characters leap off the page, sweating, swearing, living, breathing. Manny’s relationship with his mother is drawn with such visceral lines that one cannot help but feel the pull of the umbilical cord that tethers them. Here Tsiolkas excels, in the intimate portrayals of complex familial love tangled with obligation, resentment, and loss.

The setting in this novel of what is very much an effort of all things contemporary fiction, oscillates between the sun-beaten streets of Melbourne and the shadowed memories of Greece, and it is here that Tsiolkas plants the seeds of his most poignant imagery. His portrayal of my Melbourne is palpable, a city pulsing with the beats of myriad hearts it houses. Yet, the transitions between locales are sometimes jarring, pulling the reader from immersion as surely as a misstep on a cobblestone street.

Critics of Tsiolkas will find familiar ground here in his exploration of the explicit. "The In-Between" wades through the waters of sexual exploration and existential angst with the subtlety of a sledgehammer cracking open a pomegranate. For aficionados of his more graphic narrations, this will be a feast. However, for those hoping for a more nuanced exploration of Manny’s in-betweenness, the overt may overshadow the covert, the spoken drown out the silent.

In all, this is a novel that, like its protagonist, exists within a limbo of both realisation & potential. Tsiolkas fans may embrace it as a bold, if not quite entirely coherent, sketch of man’s search for identity in a dissonant chorus of cultural voices. Others might find it an overambitious symphony, where the melody is lost amidst the cacophony of trying to be too many things at once.

It’s a three-and-a-quarter star journey through a narrative purgatory, where the lights are indeed very bright, but the path is occasionally, just a little bit too dim. Would I recommend boarding this train? Yes, but perhaps keep the timetable handy, for you might find yourself wishing…

PS: In a past life, this would’ve been a 4⭐️ novel, but the level of modern Literature, along with my current focus on the Classics, has meant the ratings right now are at a all-new premium, a good thing me so thinks 🤔
Profile Image for Kimbofo.
854 reviews182 followers
December 18, 2023
Australian author Christos Tsiolkas is known for bold storytelling that is provocative, salacious and socially aware. But as he matures, so, too, does his work.

His latest novel, The In-Between, is a tender love story between two middle-aged men who have been damaged by past relationships.

Yes, it still maintains Tsiolkas’ trademark edginess and carnality, but it’s certainly softer and less risque than anything he’s written before.

I ate it up in the space of a weekend and loved its depiction of an unlikely relationship between two very different people essentially seeking the same thing: love, companionship and to be “seen” for who they are, not what they are.

This character-driven story begins with a nervous internet date between Perry, a translator newly repatriated from France, and Ivan, a landscape gardener who runs his own business.

Both men are in their 50s but are like chalk and cheese — one is the son of Greek immigrants, the other is the son of Serbians; one is highly educated, the other is not; one has travelled the world, the other has only ever left Australia once; one is cerebral, the other is practical; one lives in Melbourne’s inner north, the other lives in a southern bayside suburb; one has never had children, the other has an adult daughter and a grandchild.

Yet both men have something important in common — they have been damaged in love and are almost at the point of giving up on ever finding love again. Perry is still recovering from a long-time affair with a married man that went sour, while Ivan is constantly at loggerheads with his ex-wife over a past affair that ended in theft and violence.

It then charts the course of their relationship over many years in a series of sizeable chapters, each one told from a different perspective and at a different point in time so that the reader has to fill in the gaps about what might have happened in between (hence the novel’s title).

The In-Between is written in Tsiolkas’ usual unflinching style. His descriptions of sexual encounters might come as a shock if you have not read his work before. But there’s a new vulnerability in his writing, a willingness to reveal the hunger for human connection in emotional, not just physical, terms.

He lays bare the need to be kind and gentle with one another, to accept differences, to forgive others their trespasses and to live with candour and verve.

I think this might be his best work yet.

For a more detailed review, please visit my blog.



Profile Image for PaperMoon.
1,681 reviews73 followers
December 2, 2023
A credible/realistic depiction of two later-aged men finding their way toward each other from different yet similar broken pasts. Nothing worthwhile comes easy and the struggles/secrets each MC try to/have to overcome made me cheer their efforts. I'm in awe at how the author can somehow make casual dinner conversations bristle with suppressed rage and violence. The final chapter makes an abrupt POV change - which was disconcerting at first since I struggled to place the narrating character - but things eventually fell into place, leading to a deeper appreciation of what it means to love another. 4.5 stars.
Profile Image for Tundra.
797 reviews41 followers
December 11, 2023
I loved the journey and exploration of love. The final third of the book made it for me. I struggled with some of the explicit scenes and found them too sensory and long - out of my comfort zone there for sure. Christos is a brilliant writer and speaker and he doesn’t shy from challenging his readers. It is the depth of his humanity that shines.
Profile Image for Chris Giacca.
46 reviews5 followers
December 6, 2023
I can never quite decide whether I enjoy Tsiolkas. I think he's a superb storyteller, that's without question. And I genuinely loved Loaded. But there's something about his writing that I find jarring sometimes. It might be his penchant for telling rather than showing, or when he tells first and then shows as an almost-afterthought. Which isn't to say that I think he can't write, it's more that for me, that style takes me out of the story sometimes. Again, there's no question that he is a fantastic novelist.

For me, the enduring takeaway from this novel is that of the complexity of being queer. Especially of the generations before Zoomers; the queer Boomers, Gen Xers, and to an extent even my generation, the much-maligned Millenials. The self loathing, the internalised homophobia, the feeling of being less-than and having to sequester a part of your identity for fear of judgement. The revulsion at your own gaze. It's difficult. And this isn't to say that Gen Z doesn't have its own struggles; we aren't at parity yet. But we are undoubtedly far removed from the days you would fight someone for suggesting you like boys if you're a boy. Or at least I think we are? Are we? Am I being naïve and optimistic?

And yet, in among this Tsiolkas also raises the beauty and masculinity of queer - specifically gay - love. It is writ large in his prose the adoration he holds for a man's body, the joy he finds in the flesh, the carnality of it all. The scents, the weight, the baseness. He illustrates beautifully how lust treads the borders between divine and profane. Tender and primal. Light and shade. It is joyous, there is no other word.

I have my issues with The In-Between, probably most specifically Chapter/Part 5. But overall I think it is a very authentic representation of life for queer men of a specific age and background, and I am appreciative of that. It's an important voice to be heard in the choir.
Profile Image for Dani Sitnik.
13 reviews
December 14, 2023
I really don't know why I keep attempting to read this author! Feel like his mission is to make every character as unlikeable as possible, and to give as many different accounts of men urinating as possible. I got half way through the dinner party scene and had the thought that if this was actually a dinner party I was attending, I think I'd be bored enough of the sniping and tension that I would have left. Also felt a bit meandering, without a strong sense of mysteries to be uncovered or problems to be solved. I'm sure this might light the fire of some people, but it just doesn't do it for me. Was glad to be rid of the whole lot of them when I finished!
Profile Image for Alonso.
358 reviews19 followers
January 27, 2024
The mastery of Tsiolkas to portray intimacy with words is out of this world. This book is full of ordinary moments that become a window into the lives of the couple in this story. True to Tsiolka’s style, there’s a rawness in the story and the way these characters interact with their sexuality and past relationships. The book is beautifully written and a perfect illustration of the human condition and love experiences in the third age of people
Profile Image for Craig and Phil.
1,822 reviews97 followers
November 1, 2023
Thank you Allen & Unwin for sending us a copy to read and review.
An interesting and relevant queer inspired premise piqued my interest.
Finding love in your fifties where technology is cut throat, body and age are main factors and where historical emotional baggage is still rife is a reality lived by many.
A journey I was invested in.
Perry meets Ivan from an online site.
They click despite obvious differences.
Refreshingly feelings develop and hope in finding love is restored.
Both have lived life, been scarred and been in love and seem to be ready for a new chapter.
A journey that is full of discovery, meeting friends and family and confronting personal issues.
In parts this lacked cohesion and seemed disjointed.
It is divided in parts so probably very deliberate.
The author really has talent for capturing snapshots from obscure observations that occur around us all the time including interactions people have with each other.
The characters were not likeable.
Conversations and aspersions seemed like this age group were superficial and happy to dismiss their home country at any opportunity.
The idea the country their forebears left is a better prospect is something that doesn’t hold my interest.
Expensive clothes and career snobbery is not either.
Not my cup of tea.
Profile Image for Helen Gladman.
33 reviews7 followers
November 12, 2023
Long time fan of Tsiolkas’s work, and general admirer of the man himself. You never quite know what he’s going to do next. I bought this after hearing him speak and devoured it. Ivan and Perry will live with me for a long time. The exploration of finding love in your fifties is delicately and beautifully handled and never seeps into excessive sentimentality or mawkishness. It’s also balanced by some pretty overt physicality and sexuality - it’s a window into a life - into lives - that are outside my experience and that’s no bad thing. Damascus is my favourite book of his but this one easily comes a close second.

I also found the structure fascinating. Not just switching between the points of view of the two men, but the subtle shifts into outsider view points. It felt like a choral performance at times. Just beautiful.
Profile Image for Daniel Myatt.
819 reviews86 followers
July 12, 2024
A slow paced tale of dating, love, and the evolution of a relationship.

Ivan and Perry have both loved and lost, and now it's time to bite the bullet and see what the future holds.

Beautifully written, sad and moving yet always hopeful.
Profile Image for Melinda Nankivell.
291 reviews10 followers
January 7, 2024
A beautiful and honest love story of two men who meet each other in their 50s and open themselves up to the vulnerability that comes with love. It’s a wonderful exploration of the matters beyond romantic love: how do you trust again when you’ve been so hurt in the past? How do you navigate your friendships and families while introducing someone new? How do you combine your lives, overlook past wrongs, negotiate fidelity? There’s so much more to this than a simple love story, and it makes it a wonderful read.

In typical Tsiolkas style there’s a lot of sensual stuff particularly around smells. There are vignettes of other people, sometimes strangers, observing the couple, which are interesting additions. I would have given this 5 stars but felt the last two chapters (the last one in particular) dragged on a bit. Up until that point I thought this was magnificent.
Profile Image for Merceiam.
255 reviews6 followers
November 20, 2023
Tsiolkas writes characters and their emotions beautifully. This novel details the relationship that grows between Ivan and Perry, two middle-aged men coming to terms with their pasts.
There are explicit sex scenes in the book- something that is rarely included nowadays.
The story became a little disjointed for me in the last third, however. New characters were introduced and the novel began to feel more like a series of vignettes.
Profile Image for Karen.
607 reviews
March 16, 2024
3.5 rounded down

As with other books by Tsiolkas there is much to admire here. He is a wonderful observer of relationships, of human nature, migrant communities, Melbourne and its suburbs, and so much more. This love story, between two 50 plus men, is no exception. The opening, when we first met the two men, is simply told and captured me from page one. However, from then on the reader is made to work, to keep pace with the shifting scenes, time frames and points of view and for me, some shifts and scenes worked better than others. Among my favorites was the dinner party which reads a little like a complete one act play and is so well observed.

"He cannot concentrate on the conversation. He has drunk too much, and it is a discussion that he finds exhausting, a circle without end, where cause and effect are entangled and where the enormity of what is at stake makes any solution seem either pitifully inadequate of a utopian impossibility."

I loved the juxtaposition of the histories and present lives of Ivan, the landscaper, and cosmopolitan Perry the translator, the later who has lived across the world in very different circumstances and circles. But unfortunately I also felt the novel dragged in places, I struggled with the hate and violence that inhabited one character in particular, and some of the sex scenes felt too much like their sole purpose was to shock the reader and that impacted negatively on other aspects of the story for me. A mixed experience but one I shall remember.
Profile Image for endrju.
333 reviews58 followers
January 31, 2024
Tsiolkas made me want to go back to Athens, which may very well happen this April. I love how the whole city smells of orange blossoms in the spring. As for the novel, I appreciated the change of perspectives with the introduction of adjacent and completely unrelated characters who happen to be in the vicinity of either Pericles or Ivan. It made for a nice rhythm. The novel also made me smile because Tsiolkas captured something of Belgrade in Ivan's description of the city as "parts of it were dirty and parts of it didn't work and everyone is on the move". All in all, the novel's not a bad company to spend an afternoon or two with, but it's too narratively tidy, without much of a flourish. I like my literature more aesthetically and politically daring.
Profile Image for Sammy thebookninja_.
149 reviews4 followers
September 11, 2023
Delicately tender and brimming with heart, this love story offers a captivating exploration of its central characters' intricate emotions. As an introvert and overthinker, I was particularly drawn to the rich portrayal of their inner thoughts. What sets this book apart is its refreshing uniqueness; it defies the conventions of typical love stories.
However, having previously read one of Tsiolkas other works, 'The Slap,' I couldn't help but notice a missing element – the dramatic tension that keeps readers yearning for more. While this narrative is character-driven and beautifully introspective, it may leave you wanting a touch more to keep you truly engrossed.
Profile Image for Trevor.
507 reviews73 followers
January 19, 2024
This would have been a 5 star book review, but the ending of the story let it down for me, there was no complete closure of the main love story, however the writing and sentiment throughout the book were wonderful.

Overall I have mixed emotions about this book.
January 2, 2024
While I have loved Tsiolkas’ previous work, I found the writing in this book to be unnecessarily vulgar and verbose - both getting in the way of what could have been a great story.
2,618 reviews60 followers
April 3, 2024

4.5 Stars!

“Only slowly did it dawn on him how that superiority and antagonism were formed from childhood in moneyed households and within elite private schools.”

You can start to get the impression that it’s merely a world revolving around constant sex, veering between repressed homosexuality and hyper-sexuality. But there is obviously a lot more going on in here, although those many graphic sex scenes are certainly not going to be to everyone’s liking, but there’s no doubting the sheer quality of the writing and his ability to really put you deep into scenes and into the heads of the characters.

“It is gossip and slander, the guerrilla tactics of undermining and sabotage, of making envy a virtue and a weapon that he detests. Bitchinesss. He hates it in women. He hates it in gay men.”

Tsiolkas makes it look almost effortless the way he creates tension and balances it with insight and texture to really put you right there in the restaurant or in the bedroom, so that you are deeply embedded in the moment, invested in the characters. The chapter set at the dinner party was nothing but pure joy from start to finish, and displayed many pleasing echoes of “Don’s Party”.

So this is another excellent piece of literary fiction from one of Australia’s best writers and I highly recommend it to one and all. Great stuff!
Profile Image for Alicia.
183 reviews8 followers
May 18, 2024
The writing is good but there was something unsatisfying about this novel. A skimming of the surface but... Part of the explanation seems to be a propensity of the author to tell and not show, but there's more to it than that. Maybe I need to try another Tsiolkas before I'm qualified to comment further... Unlike many reviewers, I did appreciate the raw authenticity and honesty of the sex scenes.
November 12, 2023
I loved this book. I felt very attached to the characters, and loved the insight into their most intimate thoughts and feelings.

I loved the ending, the glimpse into Lena’s life as she glimpsed into her own father’s life as a closeted homosexual. I loved the subtle parallels the author managed to draw between Perry and Gerald, with their phrasing “she was kindness itself.”

Though I loved the sudden turn to Lena’s point of view at the end, I could not help but wonder what happened to dear Ivan and Perry? The book left me wanting more of the story. Though perhaps that was the point…
Profile Image for Alice Williams.
15 reviews1 follower
November 16, 2023
Took me a minute to understand where the book was going but once I did it was incred. It’s told in a number of different perspectives, each a contrasting insight into the emotional turmoil of being queer in Gen X, both as a youth and its manifestation in adulthood. Highlighting the beauty of all types of relationships, I really took to the storyline of the comfort and understated beauty of a great platonic love. I’ll never forgive the use of the words ‘pong’ in a sex scene but everything else was play on.
27 reviews2 followers
February 27, 2024
Ok conflicted cause like this was not a bad book by any means but I can’t say that I liked it. Like written well, characters felt fleshed out and believable and was always an engaging read……but he just makes everything so gross ugly and sad. Like sex, friendship, relationships and everything is just approached so pessimistically. Also can’t tell if the subtle misogyny of some of the characters is like a commentary or just the authors views. Anyway….idk
120 reviews
January 11, 2024
The In-Between is one of Tsiolkas’s more muted, tender stories. It has a strong start as Perry and Ivan meet for a first date. They are both scarred by previous relationships but find a surprising and quiet intimacy. I enjoyed their story a lot, but the book later deviates to focus on peripheral characters which I felt was a wasted opportunity. There are also some very vulgar scenes which I do not think complemented the tone of the book. I also don’t know why so many authors lean heavily on the ‘clashing political opinions at a dinner party’ trope. 3/5
12 reviews
March 25, 2024
I will say this is a solid 1.0

I don’t think I’ve read from a man’s perspective, and I hope I never do again. The only reason this is not sitting below a 1.0 is because it switched to a woman’s pov at the end.

My mind was clean before I read this book. Im not into gay porn.
Profile Image for Steve Maxwell.
604 reviews8 followers
December 10, 2023
A love story, unlike a lot of others!

Two middle-aged men meet up in Melbourne for a date after finding each other online. Both men have been injured in the past and are unsure of what they want, friendship, love, or romance.

It's a beautiful story spanning two countries and focusing on two families. Tsiolkas, as always, tells a wonderful, relatable tale.
Profile Image for Jack.
127 reviews
March 8, 2024
A beautiful insight into the complexities of human nature.

Struggled with this initially but it picked up once I grasped his writing style.

Gorgeous !
Profile Image for Kate.
78 reviews2 followers
January 8, 2024
Such a beautiful story about the complexities of relationships and love. The writing is incredibly honest and insightful.
154 reviews48 followers
January 4, 2024
4.5 stars

The In-Between is a well crafted, intelligent and empathetic novel about finding love in the ‘in between stage’ of middle aged life. Perry and Ivan are two gay men in their 50s who have already experienced their fair share of love and betrayal and this time around join a dating app to escape their loneliness. Each chapter alternates point of view between the two men and focuses on small, seemingly insignificant days in their lives as a couple, from the first nervous date, to a year later at Ivan’s work, to Perry and Ivan at a combustive dinner party and so on. While this could have been too insular in the hands of a less capable author, each section shows subtle and significant shifts in their relationship and its progression. Coupled with Tsiolkas’ impressive ability at getting in his characters’ heads and trusting his reader to read ‘between’ the lines, we are treated to such a beautifully multi layered story about love, kindness, trauma, sexuality, and just, being human.

Make no mistake though, the novel isn’t some overly sentimental cry fest. Tsiolkas writes with a real raw authenticity that some readers will find confronting or just too much. There is a lot of graphic sex to be found within the pages here, but it is not intended to be titilating, it is intended to get across the physicality of love in all of its smell and taste. And boy does Tsiolkas focus on odour! Sex can be pretty sanitised in novels and media, but the senses are employed here as he describes the smells that come along with bodily fluids in detail. The effect is to equalise us with the characters, to create a stronger empathy from reader to character because witnessing such vulnerability and something usually so private facilitates this bond. It’s pretty remarkable. I felt like I knew these characters inside out.

Thematically, the book has a lot going on and I really appreciated how much space Tsoilkas gives the reader to work things out for themselves. This is definitely a book where we are shown and not told. It’s not very often we get a love story between two middle aged people, and especially not one so honest. Love at this stage of life according to the novel, can become kinder. It is still about passion, but less about perfection and possession. Middle aged bodies come with the literal baggage of age and wear and tear but also the metaphorical baggage and ghosts of past trauma, relationships, sex and life. Both Ivan and Perry wrestle internally with letting go of their past, with saying goodbye to the hope of youth, with transitioning away from friends they have outgrown, with accepting that their minds and bodies and lives have changed permanently.

These themes are layered with the experiences of being a second generation Australian, being a returned ex pat, being a gay man who experienced the 80s and of course, class differences. The dinner party in the third section was incredibly written, as Ivan, a working class landscaper with slightly more conservative views finds himself surrounded by very left wing academics who backpacked around Europe in their 20s and now want to discuss climate change and misogyny. The author uses the dinner party to underpin the very real class differences between the two lovers, not shying away from showing that Perry is genuinely nervous about how his partner is going to handle the discourse, caught between potential embarrassment at Ivan’s lack of knowledge, shame at his own snobbiness and mixed feelings about his friends’ intentions. At the same time, we see that Perry wants more than anything for Ivan to be comfortable and safe in the discussion, and it is his quiet remonstrations of support that reveal the strength of their relationship and where it is now at.

This is an amazing novel for those of us who love being in characters heads and enjoy a really honest, almost visceral look at the human condition. My only quibble is the last part of the novel, where Tsiolkas’ decision to focus on a third character took me out of the story a little. I understand the reasons behind it, and theoretically I appreciate the idea of basically slowly zooming out and away from Ivan and Perry and leaving them to their relationship. But I didn’t feel the third character was written as well or I didn’t connect as well to her, so unfortunately the last part fell slightly flat for me.

Overall, a really enjoyable novel and a great one to start the year off with.

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