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  • Published: 1 July 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407091518
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336

Afterwards




The new novel, another remarkable story of the complexities of guilt and moral responsibility, from the Booker-shortlisted author of The Dark Room and Field Study.

To love someone, need you know everything about them?

When Alice and Joseph meet, they fall quickly into a tentative but serious relationship. Both are still young and hopeful of each other, but each brings with them an emotional burden. Alice's family is full of absences and Joseph harbours an unspeakable secret from his time in the army in Northern Ireland.

When Alice's widowed grandfather begins to tell Joseph about his RAF experiences in 1950s Kenya, something still raw is tapped in Joseph; his reaction to the older man's unburdening of guilt is both unexpected and devastating for them all.

  • Published: 1 July 2010
  • ISBN: 9781407091518
  • Imprint: Vintage Digital
  • Format: EBook
  • Pages: 336

About the author

Rachel Seiffert

The daughter of an Australian father and a German mother, Rachel Seiffert was born in Oxford and later moved to London. Her novel The Dark Room was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. She has also written an acclaimed collection of short stories, Field Study.

Also by Rachel Seiffert

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Praise for Afterwards

[Afterwards] is about invisible borders, the hard-held Irish border, the border between lovers, between generations, between past and present. It is a fine and profound work

Irish Times

A quietly ambitious book

Guardian

A remarkable feat... precise and searing... One of the most intelligent and ethical writers of her generation

Literary Review

Carefully unsentimental...remarkable...we are given the complicated substance of unadorned lives

Sunday Times

Compelling... A daring work, sure to gain her greater recognition..the portrait of the ex-soldier Joseph is as fine a depiction of a man in crisis as you will read

Daily Telegraph

Despite the halting, low-key narration as Joe and Alice attempt to piece together the terms of their engagement, a simmering tension builds, though Seiffert is admirably less concerned with the revelation of atrocities than in how the soldier, having breached the first commandment, negotiates a return to ordinary life

Observer

Elegant... Authentic... One of the significant accomplishments of Afterwards is a coiling suspense driven more by psychology than circumstance

New York Times

Masterful, delightfully controlled prose...This highly engaging novel continues to reveal itself long after it is read

Sunday Telegraph

Rachel Seiffert is the poet and spokeswoman of those who find themselves on the wrong side of history...powerful, almost unbearably intense and wonderfully written

The Times

Readers who wonder why... Martin Amis and... Kiran Desai seem to flinch from writing about their own times should study Ms Seiffert

Economist

Seiffert returns to many of the themes of her first novel, The Dark Room: guilt, grief, memory and forgetting. But Afterwards also asks the questions about how much people can really know about the people they love

Independent

Superb...the drama is balanced and the tension sustained...masterful

Financial Times