The Forgotten Waltz: A Novel and over one million other books are available for Amazon Kindle. Learn more

Buy Used
Used - Very Good See details
$7.84 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
   
Kindle Edition
 
   
Have one to sell? Sell yours here
Forgotten Waltz
 
 
Start reading The Forgotten Waltz: A Novel on your Kindle in under a minute.

Don't have a Kindle? Get your Kindle here, or download a FREE Kindle Reading App.

Forgotten Waltz [Paperback]

Anne Enright (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)


Available from these sellers.


Formats

Amazon Price New from Used from
Kindle Edition $9.34  
Hardcover $16.63  
Paperback $10.85  
Paperback, 2011 --  
Audio, CD --  
Audible Audio Edition, Unabridged $17.95 or Free with Audible 30-day free trial


Product Details

  • Paperback
  • Publisher: Jonathan Cape (2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0224089048
  • ISBN-13: 978-0224089043
  • Product Dimensions: 5.3 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.1 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (28 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,572,710 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Discover books, learn about writers, read author blogs, and more.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
37 of 40 people found the following review helpful
The Story of a Love Affair October 11, 2011
Format:Hardcover
Anne Enright, author of the 2007 Booker Prize winner, The Gathering, has written a new novel called The Forgotten Waltz. It is told from the point of view of Gina Moynihan who has a lust-filled affair with a married man, Sean Vallely. They first meet at a garden party hosted by Anne's sister Fiona, and progresses from there. At first there are innocent (and not so innocent) looks, and then on a business trip in Switzerland, the affair begins in earnest.

When Gina first sees Sean at Fiona's garden party, she is happily married to her husband, Conor. There are no outward signs that there is trouble in the marriage and, as I read this book, I did not see the marriage and any shortcomings as a reason for the affair. Gina saw Sean, felt lust, and let her impulses prevail. Sean is married and has a child named Evie who, at the time that Gina first meets Sean, is four years old.

The novel is not told in any particular linear order. It is related to the reader in fragments of memory that Gina recalls. "So don't ask me when this happened or that happened. Before or after seems beside the point. As far as I was concerned, they were happening all along."

Always playing a key role is Evie, Sean's daughter. When she is five she begins to have childhood seizures that continue for many years. Annette, Sean's wife, is vigilant about Evie's medical care and appears not to notice that Sean is otherwise preoccupied with Gina. Evie, however, has the sense that something is happening in her home that is not quite normal. At one point, she even sees Sean and Gina kissing on the stairs of her home.

The novel takes place at the start of Ireland's economic boom in the nineties and progresses to the depressions that hits later on. As the novel starts, people are making more money than they know what to do with, buying second homes with ocean views and dropping hints about all the money that they have. By the time the novel ends, people are lucky just to have jobs. Their houses have been on the market for a very long time and no one is buying. The market has seen a real depression.

Gina tells the whole story in the first person and we go along with her as she does her best to remember what happened between her and Sean. She strongly believes that Evie is responsible for her and Sean's love. Evie's watchful eyes, times of poor health, and perspicacious study of her father and his lover mark an ever-present omen for Gina.

As the affair progresses, Gina finds out that she is not the first person Sean has been unfaithful with. There was a young woman in his office, many years ago, that Sean had courted and loved. Gina is careful not to ask Sean too many questions about this as she wants to see their relationship as special and romantic, which it is, but as life goes, it is not that unique. "Every normal thing he said reminded me that we were not normal. That we were only normal for the twelve foot by fourteen foot of a hotel room. Outside, in the open air, we would evaporate."

During the course of the affair, Gina deals with the death of her beloved mother, Joan, her estrangement from her sister, Fiona, and the breakdown of her marriage to Conor. She tries to see these events in relationship to the affair but they all have a full life separate from her love for Sean.

It takes Sean a long time to leave his wife, time that Gina waits for him in agony and pain. She had hoped they'd be together by Christmas but as April comes around, Sean is just beginning to move into Gina's home. "It was delicate business, being the Not Wife."

The affair takes on a triangular pattern - Sean, Gina and Evie. "I said it to Sean once - I said, if it had not been for Evie, we would not be together - and he looked at me as if I had blasphemed." "As far as he is concerned, there is no cause; he arrived in my life as though lifted and pushed by a swell of the sea."

The book is filled with musical metaphors and reads poetically. Enright is a master of the inner mind and our deepest thoughts. She not only tells a story but she captures lives, sparing no moment, no movement and no detail. Nothing is too small for her to notice and reflect on. In fact, it is the small things that make up the big deeds that change our lives from one second to the next.
Was this review helpful to you?
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful
By Susan
Format:Hardcover
I loved this book....up until the last chapter when I felt as if it ended so abruptly I actually thought there must have been an error in the printing, that the blank pages after the "About the Author" note were perhaps meant to have contained an epilogue. Sadly, they were just that: blank pages that left me feeling as if I'd been led up to a glorious mountainside only to be carelessly abandoned.

I'm simultaneously reading another book, a memoir in which the author's daughter is referenced as waving her arms in a circular motion while rolling her eyes, asking, "Point?". That is exactly how I pictured myself at the end of this otherwise artfully woven tale.

I was easily drawn into the narrative; how a chance meeting eventually impacted not just the lead character's life, but of course those around her as well. At the same time, I did find the author's frequent intergections of "I think"'s and "I mean's" to be a bit cloying after awhile. Yes, it was as if the character were telling me a story in real time, but I have friends who tell such yarns with so many intergections of "you know's" I soon tire of listening.

However, unlike some other reviewers, for the most part I enjoyed the texture of Enright's prose. The following entry, during the early part of the book, particularly resonated with me when she described the man with whom Gina, the first person character, becomes involved:"...a man who, in his Speedos, was not exactly a siren song. He stirred us up. Everything he said was funny and everything seemed to do you down. Or buoy you up. He could do that too.....Even in the strong sun, I was caught by the beauty of his eyes, which were larger than a man's should be and more easily hurt. I saw the child in him that afternoon, it was easy to see: an eight-year old charmer, full of mischief and swagger. But I don't know if I saw how tactial it all was. I don't think I saw the way he was threatend by his own desires, or how jealousy and desire ran so close in him he had to demean a little the thing he wanted". I immediately thought, "I know this man", both then and in the various descriptions of him that followed. At the same time, I had to wonder why Gina, an otherwise bright woman, neither questions nor stands up to the frequently demeaning words and actions of such a wounded man-child. Who is it she's trying to heal? If it's herself, we have painfully little insight.

Where does this story of loss, love and blended relationships all lead? Perhaps that is precisely the point Enright stives to make, but I found as a reader it was unsettling. I don't need happily-ever-after or all-tied-up-in-a-bow endings but this left me feeling as if the denouement, a crucial part of a story, was placed alongside the cold Irish countryside setting, beyond my vision where I remain grappling for closure.
Was this review helpful to you?
43 of 50 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Enright has written a beautifully, painfully honest novel of the train wreck of infidelity breached on the immutability of marriage. Set in Dublin, it begins innocently enough, eyes meeting across a garden. Years pass before Gina and Sean begin the long, passionate involvement that destroys both their marriages. Once engaged, neither has the desire to stop, entranced in a slow dance that obliterates everything else: "We fitted together our jigsaw love." Gina's narrative seduces, rationalizes the inevitability of this union, making the reader complicit in her obsession, her need for this flawed man who is exceptional perhaps only to her. This is the song of the other woman, one who appears helpless to resist the secret couplings, the falling away of spousal intimacy.

The jarring note in Gina's drama is the existence of Sean's child, Evie, a daughter with problems that cause her mother great anxiety, her father an excess of distraction: The fact that a child was involved made everything that much harder to forgive." Evie is as real as the affair that destroys two homes, casting a shadow on the right to claim happiness in a spoken-for other, a vague guilt in pleasurable stolen moments as Gina and Sean "pulled the sky down... to settle over us like a cloth". Enright writes seamlessly of conflict, internal and external, the emotional detritus of the breaking of vows. But she does so with great skill, the language of the heart impossible to map- or control as Gina and Sean veer towards each other and away from their families. Collateral damage.

This author has the ability to capture minute details that etch themselves so precisely into our memories, tapping into childhood unsullied by reality, the love of a foolish father, the red lines left in a plump ankle by a child's elastic sock, the vulnerable, pale flesh of a lover's body, the soundless moue of a child's mouth before expelling a howl of outrage, the shame of stealing another woman's husband. Gina forces us to see her side, to feel empathy for her hopeless, selfish passion, to love and hate a man who turns to infidelity in an intolerable marriage, a wife's body scarred by discontent and the ravages of time. Reading this novel limned with humanity is to enter into a fugue state, to become Gina, with her vague needs and few demands, shadowing Sean like a second heart. Luan Gaines/2011.
Was this review helpful to you?
Most Recent Customer Reviews
In Dublin'sfair city
Anne Enright continues her wistful ,bordering on melancholic view of life.We try to get through to the essence of the narrator Gina as she leaves her marriage to Conor,for a... Read more
Published 4 days ago by Celia
Brutally honest and painful story of an affair
This very disturbing and gloriously written novel, by Anne Enright, takes place in Ireland, but a modern day Ireland which, other than the places which are named, could just as... Read more
Published 16 days ago by Dana R. Casella
Orange Prize Shortlist 2012
"I thought it would be a different life, but sometimes it is like the same life in a dream: a different man coming in the door, a different man hanging his coat on the hook. Read more
Published 16 days ago by 1morechapter.com
Boring book with a bad ending
I slogged through this whole book hoping to be redeemed at the end. All for nothing. I don't recommend this one at all. Read more
Published 19 days ago by Lynwell
Annoying
Distant self involved main character....vague and nearly invisible interactions. Evie is the only one you get a sense of at all.... Read more
Published 22 days ago by G. S. Mellinger
Boring, boring, boring
Picked this up knowing it had been nominated for the Orange Prize and having heard good things about the author's THE GATHERING. But I was quite disappointed. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Martha
Desire commands, despite misgivings we give in
Enright understands human frailty. Faced with powerful attraction and conventional ideas of love that brought her to her present situation, Gina Monynihan analyzes her motivation... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Paige Turner
The Forgotten Waltz
I found this book to be very boring. I started to read it for a book review and only got to the 3rd chapter. I just couldn't read anymore. Read more
Published 1 month ago by Rhoda Ross
forgotten waltz
jThis book has no saving grace. It tells of an adulterous woman who has no shame about the fact that her paramour has children nor does she seem to be embarassed about socializing... Read more
Published 2 months ago by angela l
well written chick-lit
Basically the story of an extra marital affair between the narrator and the curiously unlikeable Sean. Read more
Published 2 months ago by sally tarbox
Search Customer Reviews
Only search this product's reviews

Inside This Book (learn more)
Browse and search another edition of this book.
Browse Sample Pages:
Front Cover | First Pages | Surprise Me!
Search Inside This Book:

What Other Items Do Customers Buy After Viewing This Item?


Suggested Tags from Similar Products

 (What's this?)
Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product).
 

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

Customer Discussions

This product's forum
Discussion Replies Latest Post
No discussions yet

Ask questions, Share opinions, Gain insight
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 

Search Customer Discussions
Search all Amazon discussions
   





Look for Similar Items by Category