A Truce That Is Not Peace
by Miriam Toews
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Pub Date 28 Aug 2025 | Archive Date Not set
4th Estate | Fourth Estate
Description
‘I would have read another thousand chapters’ CATHERINE NEWMAN
‘Tragi-comic, and incredibly moving … essential reading for turbulent times’ LAURA VAN DEN BERG
‘A Truce That Is Not Peace is a stunner’ HANNAH PITTARD
The internationally bestselling author of Women Talking and All My Puny Sorrows, Miriam Toews, returns with a singular memoir celebrating disobedient memory, wit, writing and life.
‘Why do you write?’ the organiser of a literary event in Mexico City asks Miriam Toews. Each attempted answer from Toews – all of them unsatisfactory to the organiser – surfaces new layers of grief, guilt and futility connected to her sister’s suicide. She has been keeping up, she realises, a decades-old internal correspondence, filling a silence she barely understands. And we, her readers, come to see that the question is as impossible to answer as deciding whether to live life as a comedy or a tragedy.
A Truce That Is Not Peace is the first time Toews has written about her own life in nonfiction. Wildly inventive yet masterfully controlled; wrenching and joyful – this is Miriam Toews at her dazzling best, remaking her world and inventing an astonishing new literary form to contain it.
Available Editions
EDITION | Ebook |
ISBN | 9780008722869 |
PRICE | £9.99 (GBP) |
PAGES | 144 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

Miriam Toews fans will enjoy this, as I am and did.
The written relationship of being a mother, grandmother, sister and daughter was honest and moving.
The only slight downside is that some of the material has been approached in her other books.

I rediscovered Miriam Toews on a recent holiday to Canada and have been belting through her books ever since. Her writing is sharp and incisive. I love the way she mixes a brutal frankness with a delicate poetic beauty in her writing. This is a collection of writing from her own life, moving back and forth in time from her teen years to the present day. Alongside the autobiographical sections weave the project she is supposed to be putting together for a festival where she is supposed to submit an essay on why she writes and her dreams of opening a museum of winds. The word whimsy isn't solid enough for the places this brilliant writing takes you because at times it is just too dark, but there are such flights of imagination and beauty here that lift it into something approaching whimsy. I'd say it's indescribably brilliant stuff.

Always balancing humour and tragedy with such fierce wit and, most importantly, heart, this is a surprising and deeply moving look back on death, previous relationships, family and the life as a writer. The perfect companion to Toews’ acclaimed novels.

This is such a powerful, brutally honest book by Miriam Toews, everything you would expect from a memoir by her. She writes about grief, guilt and her writing, and within it all tries to come to terms with her sister’s suicide. As always with her books she packs no punches, but somehow manages to write about deep trauma with a dose of humour thrown it. This book won’t be for everyone but I feel sure if you like Miriam Toews you’ll love this.

I was so looking forward to an opportunity to read A Truce That is Not Peace by Miriam Toews as she is my favourite writer and it lived up to all my expectations. She explores what it means to be a writer, a daughter, a sister, a mother, a grandma.

In April 2023, Miriam Toews is grappling with a question which she and her fellow panellists at a Mexican literary event must answer: Why do I write? She sends several replies, all rejected. She writes because her sister asked her to. Marj, to whom the book is dedicated, took her own life in 2010. The writing question is the hook on which Toews hangs this brief, raw yet beautifully written memoir but it's Marj who is at the heart of it.
Toews’s writing, a process which seems more akin to self-torture than enjoyment, began with the letters she wrote to Marj when her sister was ill and shut off from a world which she, herself, had begun to explore. Their father was bipolar, a teacher and a good one, who took his own life. Marj struggled with depression all her life, taking to periods of silence just as he had done. If you’ve read her fiction, you’ll likely know that All My Puny Sorrows draws heavily on the loss of her sister and will also be familiar with the mix of humour and darkness that characterises her work.
The book ends on a hopeful note with a lovely family scene: Toews’s redoubtable mother has been asked to keep score while her greatgrandchildren prepare themselves for ‘the world’s most epic lightsabre battle’.

My experience of reading Toews' fiction is that it flouts convention. This is why I love her work. This memoir is similarly off-script.
She is asked (with other writers) to produce a piece for a conference on "Why do you Write". Her responses play out through this memoir. None of them fit the conference brief. This is exactly the point, my opinion is that writers respond to life in a million ways and cannot be boxed into what is expected and this is the joy of reading.
Toews' life bleeds into her fiction so this work is not unexpected. She was brought up in a Mennonite community and inevitably the suicide of her sister and the long silences in her family colour her world. The narrative is episodic, back and forth (non-linear) through life's happenings and her contemporary and reflected emotions.
Her skill in balancing deep trauma with humour is extraordinary. The layering of her life is compulsive and I found it revealed itself in much of the way that we all get to know people, superficial to in-depth in fits and starts.
I loved this. I love that she does not conform and for myself I find that Toews' response to "Why Do You write" is just perfect. Works for me.
With thanks to #NetGalley and #4thestatebooks for the opportunity to read and review