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Normal People is a critically acclaimed, multimillion-copy bestseller by Sally Rooney, celebrated for its spare prose and deeply relatable characters. It explores complex themes like love, mental health, and societal expectations through the evolving relationship of Connell and Marianne. With a 4.2-star rating from over 130,000 readers and top rankings in contemporary romance and other categories, this book is a must-have for discerning readers craving emotional depth and literary excellence.







| Best Sellers Rank | #2,356 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #3 in Travel Writing (Books) #14 in Science Fiction History & Criticism #60 in Contemporary Romance (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 134,530 Reviews |
A**R
Ordinary, yet extraordinary!
A beautifully quiet story about love, timing, and the things we struggle to say out loud. Few books have felt this real to me. Long after I finished it, Marianne and Connell stayed with me. Heartbreaking, intimate, and profoundly human.
B**R
A good read.
Auther had done a good job to discribe the character and had a good time while reading through it .
A**A
What White People Are Really Like - #MillenialEdition
So this is what young white people do and this is how they think and this is how they communicate (or fail at communicating) and how their relationships are. This was the takeaway from what is beautifully written angsty-mopey tale of two Howard Roark-ish teenagers (without his clarity of purpose, but with his intelligence) set in Ireland (but it is really a microcosm for any First World White Person country). I'm not trying to be provocatively snarky here - there is a great deal regarding human emotion that is agnostic of culture and society and we do get that here through some beautiful observations and most profound analyses by an extremely talented writer. "How strange to feel herself so completely under the control of another person, but also how ordinary. No one can be independent of other people completely, so why not give up the attempt, she thought, go running in the other direction, depend on people for everything, allow them to depend on you, why not." "This ‘what?’ question seems to him to contain so much: not just the forensic attentiveness to his silences that allows her to ask in the first place, but a desire for total communication, a sense that anything unsaid is an unwelcome interruption between them." "Not for the first time Marianne thinks cruelty does not only hurt the victim, but the perpetrator also, and maybe more deeply and more permanently. You learn nothing very profound about yourself simply by being bullied; but by bullying someone else you learn something you can never forget." But a lot of this book was quite educational (if that's the right word) for me about the 'class' struggles, the sublimated impact of Modern Family lite, the unsaid rules, etiquette and expectations of teenage relationships, the pressures & manner of 'fitting-in', in another part of the world which despite the influence of Hollywood & English-language books over three decades still acted as a bit of an eye opener. Also the long rambling descriptions of making yourself a cup of tea and drinking sessions in colleges and wandering the supermarket aisles are probably what lets you peak into life in another world. "Marianne goes inside and comes back out again with another bottle of sparkling wine, and one bottle of red. Niall starts unwrapping the wire on the first bottle and Marianne hands Connell a corkscrew. Peggy starts clearing people's plates. Connell unpeels the foil from the top of a bottle as Jamie leans over and says something to Marianne. He sinks the screw into the cork and twists it downwards. Peggy takes his plate away and stacks it with the others" "The kettle comes to the boil. Lorraine sweeps the line of hairpins into the palm of her hand, closes her fist around them and pockets them. She gets up then, fills the cup of tea, adds milk, and puts the bottle back in the fridge. He watches her." Unlike a lot of folks who don't seem to have liked the deadpan, present tense-using, no quotation-marks writing style - I quite liked that and thought it wasn't unnecessarily descriptive of the background scenery as many literary novels (of which set this book is a part of with a Booker nomination and everything else) are wont to be. My bigger disconnect was with the inability to connect with the two central characters and understand their IMO pig-headed actions and decisions. Actually even though after all the insight we have, I don't think I understand their emotions of intense longing, complete depression, ability to switch on-and-off in relationships which are based on some magical other-worldly connections. Surely one would expect more rational decision making and clearer communication from intelligent human beings and awareness of a world outside their bubble? This is alluded to once in the book as well: "But that was their world then. Their feelings were suppressed so carefully in everyday life, forced into smaller and smaller spaces, until seemingly minor events took on insane and frightening significance." This line above kind of sums up what this whole book is about. Sure stories are always about people but there has to be something plausible, connectable, interesting, less tedious? So now, trying to summarise more to put my thoughts in order : - Did I enjoy reading it? I guess, yes - it is very readable - Would I recommend it? I think I would even if it's just for the writing style - Would I read another book by the author? Probably not
A**R
Amazing!
What a beautiful book!
H**H
Nice product
Second hand book but in good condition
R**I
Lovely
I really enjoyed it. I read a few chapters and then watched a few episodes of the show. I kept doing that till the end. It was really fun to read and then watch the story. I would recommend everyone do that. If you don't have a Lionsgate account then you can watch it for free on one website too. But for best experience watch it where the video quality is good. The series is really awesome. They have done justice to the book. Although there are a few alternations but still it's pretty good and pretty much all dialogues are according to the book.
P**)
Now I understand why it is so hyped!
Book review: Normal People by Sally Rooney "Life is a thing you bring with you inside your own head." Connell comes from a working class family, quite famous at his high school and is much loved by his friends. Whereas, Marianne belonging to an upper class family, is a loner and much hated. They both seem distant at school, but when they meet after school hours, they are completely different people. What seems to be a purely sexual relationship soon turns platonic. Over a period of time, sometimes together, sometimes far apart, we see Connell and Marianne finding solace in each other's company despite of multiple challenges they both face. Read this book for its- 1. Writing: Different timelines for each chapter, yet the way she has written this book, nothing seems amiss. The chapter starts in the present, but comes full circle, keeping us in the loop with the whole story. 2. Characters: Yes, Connell and Marianne are unbelievably frustrating at times, especially when it comes to their relationship with each other, but that makes them even more relatable and real. You can't help but root for them, even though you might've never been in the same shoes. 3. Plot: Rooney has captured the complexities of every relationship beautifully. I know, sometimes their relationship seemed too dramatic, yet time and again, she has given us the whole picture as to why they are-the way they are! 4. Ending: "All these years, they've been like two little plants sharing the same plot of soil, growing around one another, contorting to make room, taking certainly unlikely positions." This might seem like a story of two messed up people, complicating their lives with sex rather than acknowledging what they mean to each other. But I love how their stories come together in the end, how their bond is stronger than ever and how much they've changed each other, along with supporting one another. My only concern was Marianne's dynamics with her family, I wish it was explored more. I am so glad I read this one despite of all the mixed reviews that I came across. I get the hype for this one, positive or negative, this book definitely grabs your attention! 5🌟
I**S
Love, Misread and Misfelt. Painfully real.
Normal People by Sally Rooney is one of those books you either love or hate… there’s rarely any middle ground. I personally loved it, largely because I deeply appreciate Sally Rooney’s writing style. It takes real skill to explore such complex emotional themes with this level of subtlety. The novel dives into miscommunication, insecurity, self-doubt, societal pressure and the constant tension between self-perception and reality. It also highlights the emotional literacy gap—how people feel deeply but struggle to express it. Rooney’s restrained yet evocative writing captures the unspoken dynamics between Marianne and Connell with remarkable realism. Their relationship resists traditional romantic ideals- complex, fragile and persistently cyclical- making it feel all the more real. At times, the story feels frustrating… but that frustration is intentional. It’s part of the design, reflecting how complex relationships often unfold. Nothing feels exaggerated or artificial. Instead, it’s raw, intimate and strikingly authentic. Reading it felt less like observing a story and more like living inside it. That’s Sally Rooney’s writing for you.
V**A
You'll be dwelling into the story of their unique, private, such complex relationship
I almost read this book in one-go and I'm not a huge reader. Their relationship is so fragile yet so strong throughout the probably one of the most difficult time: the transition of high school to college year. It felt like I was in it, standing and seeing this couple struggle and grow. Can't wait to see the tv show on bbc now.
A**E
All good
The book was in good shape when it arrived. The rating does not represent a rating of the story.
E**A
Encantadora historia!
Este libro ha sido una recomendación de un persona que admiro mucho y me parece una encantadora novela de amor. Te da la sensación de volver a vivir el amor de juventud. Magnífico libro para leer durante vacaciones.
E**A
Kom lite skadad
Inte läst än och för er som inte vet så finns det inga " eller - för dialoger så ni är förberedda på det
B**N
The Best Scariest Book Ever -im kidding
The book arrived clean and carefully packaged. I’ve started reading it. The series is exactly the same as the book.
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 weeks ago