- Published: 7 October 2025
- ISBN: 9781784879976
- Imprint: Vintage Classics
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 256
- RRP: $22.99
The Wall
Discover this addictive dystopia from the Vintage Earth series

















- Published: 7 October 2025
- ISBN: 9781784879976
- Imprint: Vintage Classics
- Format: Paperback
- Pages: 256
- RRP: $22.99
It's a novel that contrives to be, by turns, utopian and dystopian, an idyll and a nightmare... Every joint and sinew of the story is restless with a sense of threat
London Review of Books
Brilliant in its sustainment of dread, in its peeling away of old layers of reality to expose a raw way of seeing and feeling. Doris Lessing once remarked that only a woman could have written this novel, and it's true... I've read The Wall three times already and am nowhere near finished
Nicole Krauss
It makes you sick, because, if she wasn't a woman, everyone would be reading it, like Robinson Crusoe
Sheila Heti, author of 'Motherhood' and 'Pure Colour'
Totally gripping
Daniel Swift, Spectator, *Books of the Year*
An extraordinarily interesting writer, always underappreciated
Elfriede Jelinek
The Wall is a wonderful novel. It is not often that you can say only a woman could have written this book, but women in particular will understand the heroine's loving devotion to the details of making and keeping life, every day felt as a victory against everything that would like to undermine and destroy
Doris Lessing
What is the wall? An allusion to the Cold War? An allegory for the Berlin Wall? Yes. But it also serves as a metaphorical stand-in for so many restrictions. It creates a situation that allows the main character and the reader to examine our ontology and what we think makes us real
Kirkus Reviews (starred)
The Wall is speculative fiction of a distinctly existential sort, where the subject being speculated on is not what happened to the world, but what happens to reality when society is stripped away...Nothing resolves, yet the book is constantly resonating
Wall Street Journal
Brutal and absorbing... But The Wall is also a resonant and realistic account of a widowed, middle-aged woman, disenchanted and depressed with the sum of her days, who is presented with the opportunity to enact what has previously eluded her: a life of her own imagining. In this way, Haushofer's book is one of the most profoundly feminist works of the past century
The Atlantic