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The Heart's Invisible Furies: A Novel Paperback – March 6, 2018

4.5 out of 5 stars 37,197 ratings

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Named Book of the Month Club's Book of the Year, 2017
Selected one of
New York Times Readers’ Favorite Books of 2017
Winner of the 2018 Goldsboro Books Glass Bell Award 

From the beloved
New York Times bestselling author of The Boy In the Striped Pajamas, a sweeping, heartfelt saga about the course of one man's life, beginning and ending in post-war Ireland

Cyril Avery is not a real Avery -- or at least, that's what his adoptive parents tell him. And he never will be. But if he isn't a real Avery, then who is he?

Born out of wedlock to a teenage girl cast out from her rural Irish community and adopted by a well-to-do if eccentric Dublin couple via the intervention of a hunchbacked Redemptorist nun, Cyril is adrift in the world, anchored only tenuously by his heartfelt friendship with the infinitely more glamourous and dangerous Julian Woodbead. At the mercy of fortune and coincidence, he will spend a lifetime coming to know himself and where he came from - and over his many years, will struggle to discover an identity, a home, a country, and much more.

In this, Boyne's most transcendent work to date, we are shown the story of Ireland from the 1940s to today through the eyes of one ordinary man.
The Heart's Invisible Furies is a novel to make you laugh and cry while reminding us all of the redemptive power of the human spirit.
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Popular Highlights in this book

From the Publisher

O: The Oprah Magazine says, “Bleak, bittersweet, and Irish to the bone.”
Press Association says, “Boyne creates lightness out of doom, humor out of sad situations.”

Editorial Reviews

Review

Praise for The Heart's Invisible Furies:

Finalist for the 2018 LAMBDA Literary Awards
Finalist for the 2018 Ferro-Grumley Award for LGBTQ Fiction

“By turns whimsical and heartbreaking, Boyne’s sprawling novel treads Dickensian territory across seven decades of Irish history, ending with a redemption for both a country and a native son.” 
– People

"Bleak, bittersweet, and Irish to the bone... explore[s] the relationship between Catholicism and patriarchy in midcentury Ireland and beyond."
– O, The Oprah Magazine

“A picaresque, lolloping odyssey for the individual characters and for the nation that confines them…The book blazes with anger as it commemorates lives wrecked by social contempt and self‑loathing…. a substantial achievement.” 
– The Guardian

"With intricate narrative precision, 
The Heart’s Invisible Furies cuts to the heart of what family is, how it is chosen, and how it endures. And it is charming and funny, even as it dives down from the precipice of endearing humor into the very specific ironies and cruelties of real life…. characters are cinematically rendered, with a deft, decadent wit that will make you laugh aloud at least once. Searing heartbreak; loneliness; a quest for internal and external redemption, solace, and contentment are all there in The Heart’s Invisible Furies."
– The Millions

“This is nothing less than the story of Ireland over the past 70 years, expressed in the life of one man…highly entertaining and often very funny…Big and clever.” 
– The Times Sunday Review

“An epic full of verve, humour and heart… sure to be read by the bucketload… deeply cinematic [and] extremely funny.” 
– The Irish Times

"Boyne writes scenes that will make a reader laugh and cry—without saccharine sentiment or flippancy. Infused with heart and humor, as well as a keen sense of man’s capacity for cruelty,
The Heart’s Invisible Furies pulsates with life’s complexity and progress’ slow march.” 
– Paste

"A big, sweeping novel...Cyril’s intelligent, witty voice takes us all the way through to the end of his life.
The Heart’s Invisible Furies is a brilliant, moving history of an Irishman, and of modern Ireland itself.” 
– Minneapolis Star Tribune

“The most inviting and completely spellbinding book this author has ever written...an outstandingly memorable achievement.” 
– Christian Science Monitor

“This in-depth look at the life of one adopted man in post-war Ireland will make you laugh, weep, and live-tweet at two in the morning.” 
Brit + Co

“More than a coming-of-age story,
The Heart’s Invisible Furies is one man’s journey from persecution to toleration….The novel… delights."
– BookPage

“Enchanting... Boyne explores Cyril’s life in luscious detail… With evocative descriptions of each city and fateful plot turns that twist the narrative in surprising ways, Boyne adroitly captures Cyril’s shifting identity as he grapples with nationality, class, and sexuality. The book becomes both an examination of Cyril’s life and a catalogue of Western society’s evolution from post-war to present day, with all its failings, triumphs, complexities, and certainties… The life of Cyril Avery is one to be relished.” 
– Publishers Weekly

“Boyne, who has a wonderful gift for characterization, does a splendid job of weaving these various lives together in ways that are richly dramatic, sometimes surprising, and always compelling… Often quite funny, the story nevertheless has its sadness, sometimes approaching tragedy. Utterly captivating and not to be missed.” 
– Booklist (starred review)

“With quick strokes and bitter humor, Boyne’s opening scene encapsulates the Irish church’s hypocrisy… Boyne continues his crusading ways with the quiet keening of this painful, affecting novel” 
– Kirkus (starred review)

“Cyril’s life story is extraordinary, tragic, and triumphant… Boyne dedicates his wise, beautiful 15th novel to John Irving. This tribute fits a story calling to mind the humane sagas of T.S. Garp, Owen Meaney, and the humble tale of Piggy Sneed. Readers will fall in love with Boyne’s characters, especially Mrs. Goggin and Cyril’s adoptive mother, Maude Avery, in this heartbreaking and hilarious story.” 
– Library Journal
 
“By turns savvy, witty, and achingly sad…This is a novelist at the top of his game.”
Mail on Sunday
 
“An epic novel….
The Heart’s Invisible Furies proves that John is not just one of Ireland’s best living novelists but also one of the best novelists of Ireland.”
– Express
 
 “Boyne creates lightness out of doom, humour out of desperately sad situations… a terrific read.”
Press Association 

About the Author

JOHN BOYNE is the author of 10 novels for adults, 5 for younger readers and a collection of short stories. His 2006 novel THE BOY IN THE STRIPED PAJAMAS was an international bestseller, selling over 7 million copies worldwide and being made into a film, a play, a ballet and an opera. In his native Ireland, he has won three Irish Book Awards and been shortlisted on 10 separate occasions. He has also won or been shortlisted for a host of international literary awards, including a Stonewall Honor Award and a Lambda Literary Award in the United States. A regular participant in internationl literary festivals, he has also been a member of the jury for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award and, in 2015, chaired the jury for Canada’s Scotiabank Giller Prize. His novels are published in over 50 languages.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Hogarth; Reprint edition (March 6, 2018)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 592 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 152476079X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1524760793
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.15 x 1.28 x 7.94 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 37,197 ratings

About the author

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John Boyne
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John Boyne was born in Ireland in 1971. The winner of four Irish Book Awards, including Author of the Year, he is the author of sixteen novels for adults, six for younger readers, a picture book, and a collection of short stories. The international bestseller The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas was made into a Miramax feature film and has sold more than eleven million copies worldwide. His novels are published in sixty languages. He lives in Dublin.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
37,197 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this novel a beautiful book of life that draws them in emotionally, with characters that leap off the pages and a writing style that makes it a treasure to read. The story receives positive feedback for its poignant moments and masterful exploration of identity, though some find the plot too full of coincidences to be believable. The book's length receives mixed reactions, with several customers finding it long and boring, while others appreciate its structure in seven-year increments.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

409 customers mention "Readability"372 positive37 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a beautiful life story that is a treasure to read.

"...An epic that spans seventy years and 600 pages, it has a picaresque dash, but, within is a heart-wrenching story of one adopted man’s secret—that he..." Read more

"...I think you can understand what I mean by this, but this book is powerful and will stay with you for awhile...." Read more

"...Particularly beautiful in this book was the way John Boyne wove relationships into and out of Cyril’s life...." Read more

"Extraordinary from the start. Captivating story and character development. Often funny but sometimes tragically bittersweet. Masterfully crafted." Read more

282 customers mention "Story quality"279 positive3 negative

Customers enjoy the story of this novel, finding it engaging and full of hope and humor, with one customer mentioning chapters that make them cry with happiness.

"...and 600 pages, it has a picaresque dash, but, within is a heart-wrenching story of one adopted man’s secret—that he is gay—in an Irish theocracy..." Read more

"...the author uses throughout helps cushion that reality but it was eye opening to me, and I found myself looking up more about this time period and..." Read more

"...It was particularly funny when Cyril gave straight answers to some of the ridiculous things others said to him...." Read more

"...life with Cyril Avery, felt his joys and his (many pains), felt his obsession for Julian, and his tender love for Bastiaan, and all of his..." Read more

280 customers mention "Writing quality"262 positive18 negative

Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as a beautifully told story with grace.

"...and a few straw men and women that Boyne inserts, the author is a generous writer who maintains a soulful, droll (oh, the dialogue is flawless!)..." Read more

"...The book takes place in a very real period in Ireland's history, when being or expressing homosexuality meant harsh judgment and persecution by..." Read more

"...where the reader is treated to well-crafted writing, a lesson in Irish history/progress, and and the tale of a man’s life exquisitely woven together..." Read more

"...I highly recommend this book to anyone, and the audiobook was very well-narrated if that's your preferred way of consuming books." Read more

155 customers mention "Character development"136 positive19 negative

Customers appreciate the character development in the book, finding them rich and colorful, with one customer noting how they leap off the pages.

"...character-driven story. What we see is a reasonable, ordinary and entirely normal man with noble aspects and fatal flaws...." Read more

"...is the type of novel where you form a deep and strong attachment with the main character; he feels like a friend and this is only done through..." Read more

"Extraordinary from the start. Captivating story and character development. Often funny but sometimes tragically bittersweet. Masterfully crafted." Read more

"...out of his life made the story all the more special and had authentic character arcs despite this being more of a personal epic...." Read more

128 customers mention "Heartwarming"108 positive20 negative

Customers find the book emotionally engaging, describing it as an emotional read that draws them in with its realistic sadness and heartbreaking events, making them cry.

"...form a deep and strong attachment with the main character; he feels like a friend and this is only done through exceptional writing and character..." Read more

"...book, but the generous portion of humor kept it at just the perfect emotional level...." Read more

"...and his (many pains), felt his obsession for Julian, and his tender love for Bastiaan, and all of his losses...." Read more

"...Overall though, this was an incredibly powerful story about identity, love, loss and hope and should be a must-read for anyone with a heart...." Read more

75 customers mention "Insight"67 positive8 negative

Customers appreciate the book's insight into human nature, particularly how it masterfully explores identity.

"...that Boyne inserts, the author is a generous writer who maintains a soulful, droll (oh, the dialogue is flawless!) character-driven story...." Read more

"...It is heartbreaking, funny, intelligent, complicated, but more than anything I think it has a resounding tone of hope and illustrates the need to..." Read more

"...Overall though, this was an incredibly powerful story about identity, love, loss and hope and should be a must-read for anyone with a heart...." Read more

"...One passage, in particular, encapsulates Cyril’s inner turmoil and left an indelible mark on my heart: “..." Read more

140 customers mention "Storyline"90 positive50 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the storyline of the book, with some finding it compelling and a good story about growing up, while others note too many coincidences that make it unbelievable.

"...The motif of identity is prevalent, but also, the question of what makes up a family is ripe in the themes...." Read more

"...I very much enjoyed the historical component of this book...." Read more

"...🙅‍♀️ What I didn't: It's impossible to pare down a lifetime of events and interactions that make a person who they are and it felt like Boyne set..." Read more

"...– The Heart’s Invisible Furies proved to be a book about relationships above all else...." Read more

56 customers mention "Length"24 positive32 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's length, with several finding it long and boring, while one customer describes it as a fantastic 70-year journey told in seven-year increments.

"...Bad: I do not have that much to say here other than certain parts seemed a bit long and there was lots of sadness...." Read more

"...feelings will cause him lifelong problems. The book’s chapters are titled by years, starting with 1945, and increasing by seven years for each..." Read more

"A beautiful story. I would have given it five stars but it ran on a little too long...." Read more

"...This book is a tome of almost 600 pages. But I didn’t notice that so much because of Mr. Boyne’s writing style...." Read more

When he fails his loved ones so
4 out of 5 stars
When he fails his loved ones so
This book balances the tightrope between fateful coincidence and absurd implausibility. With each step, we live more of Cyril’s life, with each stumble we experience his heartbreaks and, then, with each leap... we’re left breathless, and laughing, and crying (again!)... moved far beyond the pages of this epic book. As Cyril grows, so does Ireland. When he fails his loved ones so, too, does his country fail him. It becomes a testament to the human spirit as a gay man — and a country — struggle to find their place in an ever-changing world.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2017
    The invisible furies of the protagonist, Cyril Avery, are in full view for the reader to digest. An epic that spans seventy years and 600 pages, it has a picaresque dash, but, within is a heart-wrenching story of one adopted man’s secret—that he is gay—in an Irish theocracy that doesn’t tolerate it. A heinously mean and hypocritical priest threw his biological mother, Catherine, out of the church in west Cork when she was pregnant with him, in 1945. This was done in front of the entire congregation. Later, it was discovered that the priest fathered two children.

    Catherine goes to Dublin and gives up Cyril for adoption. Well-to-do Maude Avery, a literary writer and dogged chain-smoker, and Charles, a tax-evading, scandal-raising father, raise him. They always remind Cyril, “You are not a real Avery,” and in fact tell him he will not inherit anything, and at age 18 his tenancy will be finished. Cyril accepts this and doesn’t complain.

    When Cyril meets Julian Woodbead at age seven, the son of his father’s lawyer, he secretly forms a serious crush on the same aged boy, who he meets again later in boarding school. “Even at that tender age I knew that there was something about me that was different and that it would be impossible ever to put right.” Cyril and Julian form a friendship that lasts until Cyril leaves for Amsterdam during an unforgettable event.

    In Amsterdam, he is able to be openly gay, finally, and finds the love of his life, Bastiaan, an infectious disease doctor who tends to those suffering from AIDS. Life opens up for Cyril, now living free from identity fear, but also fills him with somber empathy when he meets some of Bastiaan’s patients. The story then takes us to NYC, and then again back to Ireland. Except for a stint at the Anne Frank house, life as a civil servant agrees with him.

    I wrote a rather abbreviated chain of events that are just light containers of the heavyweight narrative beneath. In lesser hands, this could have been a story dishing out rage, platitudes, and contrivance. However, despite the several coincidences and a few straw men and women that Boyne inserts, the author is a generous writer who maintains a soulful, droll (oh, the dialogue is flawless!) character-driven story.

    What we see is a reasonable, ordinary and entirely normal man with noble aspects and fatal flaws. Cyril is quiet observer who is surrounded by a host of commonplace and eccentric characters, including his adoptive parents, who are assuredly offbeat and oddball. And nothing is commonplace in Boyne’s descriptions. His parents, not unkind, named him after a pet spaniel they once owned, and often treat him like he, too, is a pet of the house. But they talk to him like he is an adult, often forgetting his presence as meaningful.

    ‘“Do you enjoy being a writer?” asks Julian, age seven, to Maude. “No, of course not. It’s a hideous profession. Entered into by narcissists who think their pathetic little imaginations will be of interest to people they’ve never met.”’ Then, Cyril inquires why Maude doesn’t like people to read her books (she is in full contempt of popular, blockbuster books, and the less who read her books, the better), she replies, ‘”For the same reason that I don’t walk into strangers’ houses and tell them how many bowel movements I’ve enjoyed since breakfast.”’

    The book is littered with quirky conversations, people, and events. But Boyne never loses track of the plot—solid and steady—or Cyril, who is in most every scene. The motif of identity is prevalent, but also, the question of what makes up a family is ripe in the themes. For Cyril, as the reader will discover, creates a family of other seekers, or passively inherits from circumstances that arose and joined him in his path to “Who is Cyril Avery?”
    His journey is a memorable odyssey, which includes the story of Ireland as a critical patriarch, to Cyril and to all the Irish people. I was riveted from beginning to end.
    27 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2019
    Overall: The Hearts Invisible Furies follows the story of Cyril Avery from 1945 through 2015 in post-war Ireland and other countries throughout his life. A cast of unforgettable characters, great writing, and alllllll the emotions make this book a real winner 7.5/10

    The Good: There are many different aspects to love about this book, but my favorite is the main character, Cyril. This is the type of novel where you form a deep and strong attachment with the main character; he feels like a friend and this is only done through exceptional writing and character development.

    The book is divided into different parts, each covering a significant portions of Cyril’s life, initially in Ireland, then a period in Amsterdam, on to New York, and finally coming back to Ireland. Cyril Avery is given up as a baby by an unwed teen mother in Ireland. Cyril is adopted by the Averys (Maude and Charles), whose treatment of Cyril is more of a business arrangement than that of what you would expect from parents.

    “I always called them Charles and Maude, never ‘Father’ and ‘Mother’. This was on Charles’s insistence as I wasn’t a real Avery. It didn’t bother me particularly but I know it made other people uncomfortable and once, in school, when I referred to them thus, a priest punched me around the ears and told me off for being modern.”

    The first time I read "you are not a real Avery" my heart broke from Cyril. Though this in itself is sad (and there are many sad parts throughout this) the author does this is in almost a humorous way by creating eccentric and unique characters. The characters, and I mean almost all the characters are unique, complex, and one of the best parts of this book.

    During the course of this book I felt every emotion... multiple times, and often quite extremely. Not just one glistening tear crying, but ugly crying. Not just a chuckle, but laughing so hard my sides hurt. I think you can understand what I mean by this, but this book is powerful and will stay with you for awhile. It is heartbreaking, funny, intelligent, complicated, but more than anything I think it has a resounding tone of hope and illustrates the need to just keep going, no matter what.

    I very much enjoyed the historical component of this book. The book takes place in a very real period in Ireland's history, when being or expressing homosexuality meant harsh judgment and persecution by friends and family, excommunication from the Church, and even imprisonment. Though much has changed (thank goodness!) the book is a reminder that people suffered under these rules surprisingly not that long ago. There is also a good amount of discussion regarding the AIDS epidemic. The humor the author uses throughout helps cushion that reality but it was eye opening to me, and I found myself looking up more about this time period and many of the points addressed.

    The Bad: I do not have that much to say here other than certain parts seemed a bit long and there was lots of sadness. I really enjoyed this book and would highly recommend it.

    Favorite Quotes:
    “Maybe there were no villains in my mother’s story at all. Just men and women, trying to do their best by each other. And failing.”

    “I’ve spent so much time pushing the boat out that I forgot to jump on and now it’s out beyond the harbour on the high seas, but it’s very nice to look at.”

    “I've always believed that if women could only collectively harness the power that they have then they'd rule the world.”

    “If there is one thing I've learned in more than seven decades of life, it's that the world is a completely fucked-up place. You never know what's around the corner and it's often something unpleasant.”

    “What you know about women,” replied Maude, “could be written in large font on the back of a postage stamp and there’d still be room for the Lord’s Prayer."

    “You look like a Greek God sent down by the immortal Zeus from Mount Olympus to taunt the rest of us inferior beings with your astonishing beauty, I said, which somehow in translation came out as "you look fine, why?”

    “Do you enjoy being a writer, Mrs Avery?” asked Julian.
    “No, of course not, she said. “It’s a hideous profession. Entered into by narcissists who think their pathetic little imaginations will be of interest to people they’ve never met.”
    20 people found this helpful
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  • Claire McAlpine
    5.0 out of 5 stars How Societal Attitudes Condition Us into Dsyfunctional Creatures,shown through the life of an illegitimate Irish boy turned man
    Reviewed in France on April 4, 2018
    I had a feeling John Boyne may have put his heart and soul into this book, though I had little idea how so. The blurb is intentionally vague, we know Cyril has been adopted and that the book is about his struggle with coming to terms with his identity.

    The last novel of his that I read was The Boy in Striped Pyjamas, a moving story set during WW2, seen through the innocent eyes of Bruno, the eight-year-old son of the commandant at a German concentration camp.

    In The Heart’s Invisible Furies, a title taken from a quote by Hannah Arendt, the German-born American political theorist:

    “A line came into my mind, something that Hannah Arendt once said about the poet Auden: that life had manifested the heart’s invisible furies on his face.”

    we meet 16-year-old Catherine Goggin, sitting quietly in church in a small Irish village of Goleen in County Cork, as she is about to be denounced and humiliated in front of the entire congregation, then thrown out of, not only the church, but her home and the village, for bringing shame on the community.

    The story is narrated through the voice of her not-yet born son, the boy that we come to know as Cyril Avery; he will be adopted and raised by Charles and Maude Avery, after Catherine travels to Dublin and takes up employment in the tea room of the Dáil Éireann (House of Representatives), where she is given a chance by the manageress, and eventually becoming that herself.

    The book is divided into different parts, each covering a significant chunk of Cyril’s life, initially in Ireland, then a period in Amsterdam, time in New York and finally coming back to Ireland.

    Cyril finds it extremely difficult within his family, his school and his culture to be himself. Through his inability to be and express himself, we see how oppressive a culture can be against anything or anyone who dares to step outside the acceptable norm, highlighting the extreme hypocrisy that therefore must exist, as humans by their very nature are not clones of each other, they are born and exist in more than just binary variations.

    In this first part, as Cyril is growing up, John Boyne makes something of a parody of his life, in particular in relation to his adoptive parents, who continually insist on reminding him that he is not a real Avery, and Cyril himself, so used to hearing this, will correct every person who uses the word mother or father, by inserting the word ‘adoptive’ to be sure they too understand.

    “I always called them Charles and Maude, never ‘Father’ and ‘Mother’. This was on Charles’s insistence as I wasn’t a real Avery. It didn’t bother me particularly but I know it made other people uncomfortable and once, in school, when I referred to them thus, a priest punched me around the ears and told me off for being modern.”

    The first time we read this, it seems sad, but the continual repetition makes it comic, and it is a tool that Boyne uses, perhaps to soften the effect of what must have been quite a soul-searching book to write, as he reaches deep into his own life experiences to create the life of Cyril.

    At the age of seven, he meets Julian, the son of a lawyer who is helping his father stay out of prison for tax evasion, they will become best friends.

    "But for all that we had, for all the luxury to which we were accustomed, we were both denied love, and this deficiency would be scorched into our future lives like an ill-considered tattoo inscribed on the buttocks after a drunken night out, leading each of us inevitably towards isolation and disaster."

    While the novel focuses on Cyril’s attempts to survive in a world hostile to his natural inclinations, his experiences highlight the struggle that so many people encounter, unable to live their lives openly and honestly without the fear of rejection and violence.

    Boyne peels back the layers of Irish inclinations and attitudes in the 20th century and shows how destructive this closed mindedness is on the lives of anyone who crosses an imaginary line of acceptable ‘being’. The contrast with how Cyril is able to live his life in the Netherlands, shown through the carefree Bastiaan, who has known no such bigotry in his life experience is revealing.

    It’s hard to say too much about the novel without giving away spoilers, except to say that this astonishing novel is a courageous, honest attempt to show how the way we conform to society and culture’s expectations, against our own nature’s can be so harmful to so many and it makes us wonder how life might be, if we lived in a more utopian world, where tolerance reigned supreme.

    Boyne admits the comic form isn’t one he’s indulged in before and he has deliberately avoided writing anything personal in his novels until now.

    “Perhaps Cyril Avery is everyone I might have been, that I am, that I amn’t, and that I might be yet. The desire to fall in love and to share one’s life with someone is neither a homosexual nor a heterosexual conceit. It’s human. We’re all suckers for a pretty face or a kind heart. What else can we do but keep hoping that the right person will show up?” John Boyne
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  • Anna
    5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful
    Reviewed in Germany on February 25, 2025
    I don't have enough words to describe how wonderful, well-written, and important this book is. It moved me incredibly deep and changed something in me.
  • Amazon Customer
    5.0 out of 5 stars Resilience, fortitude, love.
    Reviewed in Canada on September 4, 2024
    It’s an amazing piece of writing from beginning to end. One minute you’re in tears, filled with rage the next, which is followed by laughing aloud. While it may be set in Ireland it could have as easily been Canada…where we never study Maude’s books for some reason.

    The Heart’s Invisible Furies has me wanting to read more of John Boyne.
  • DAVID LOHREY
    4.0 out of 5 stars good
    Reviewed in Japan on May 3, 2023
    good
  • Richard
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing story
    Reviewed in Australia on January 10, 2025
    This is an amazing and very complex story