SLANTING TOWARDS THE SEA
BY LIDIJA HILJE | PUBLICATION: JULY 8, 2025SIMON & SCHUSTER | GENRE: LITERARY FICTION
RATING: ★★★★✬
"This isn’t a book that shouts—it whispers, aches, and lingers."
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Spanning twenty years and one life-altering summer in Croatia, Slanting Towards the Sea is at once an unforgettable love story and a powerful exploration of what it means to come of age in a country younger than oneself.
Ivona divorced the love of her life, Vlaho, a decade ago. They met as students at the turn of the millennium, when newly democratic Croatia was alive with hope and promise. But the challenges of living in a burgeoning country extinguished Ivona’s dreams one after another—and a devastating secret forced her to set him free.
Now Vlaho is remarried and a proud father of two, while Ivona’s life has taken a downward turn. In her thirties, she has returned to her childhood home to care for her ailing father. Bewildered by life’s disappointments, she finds solace in reconnecting with Vlaho and is welcomed into his family by his spirited wife, Marina. But when a new man enters Ivona’s life, the carefully cultivated dynamic between the three is disrupted, forcing a reckoning for all involved.
Set against the mesmerizing Croatian coastline, Slanting Towards the Sea is a cinematic, emotionally searing debut about the fragile nature of potential and the transcendence of love.
Ivona divorced the love of her life, Vlaho, a decade ago. They met as students at the turn of the millennium, when newly democratic Croatia was alive with hope and promise. But the challenges of living in a burgeoning country extinguished Ivona’s dreams one after another—and a devastating secret forced her to set him free.
Now Vlaho is remarried and a proud father of two, while Ivona’s life has taken a downward turn. In her thirties, she has returned to her childhood home to care for her ailing father. Bewildered by life’s disappointments, she finds solace in reconnecting with Vlaho and is welcomed into his family by his spirited wife, Marina. But when a new man enters Ivona’s life, the carefully cultivated dynamic between the three is disrupted, forcing a reckoning for all involved.
Set against the mesmerizing Croatian coastline, Slanting Towards the Sea is a cinematic, emotionally searing debut about the fragile nature of potential and the transcendence of love.
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"A Quiet Storm of Emotion Beneath Still Waters"
SLANTING TOWARDS THE SEA is a masterclass in subtle storytelling. On the surface, it’s a quiet novel—its pace gentle, its tone restrained—but beneath that stillness lies a powerful emotional current. The silence in this book isn’t empty; it’s charged with grief, longing, and the unspoken truths that shape our lives.
The story follows a woman returning to her coastal hometown, meant to take care of her ailing father. What begins as a simple act of "moving forward" becomes a profound reckoning with memory, identity, and the fragile threads of family. The sea, ever-present and symbolic, mirrors the protagonist’s inner world: calm on the surface, turbulent underneath.
Lidija Hilje’s prose is lyrical and hypnotic, weaving melancholy and memory with precision. It’s not just about lost love—it’s about the cost of silence, the weight of sacrifice, and the fragility of potential. Her eloquence almost acts as a counterpoint to the emotional repression her characters endure.
What makes the novel so compelling is how Hilje uses language to illuminate absence—the things left unsaid, the moments swallowed by pride, fear, or shame. Ivona’s internal monologue is rich and expressive, yet her actual interactions are often clipped, restrained, or evasive. That tension between inner eloquence and outer silence is where the novel truly sings. Hilje seems to understand that language can be both bridge and barrier. Her prose is lush, but her characters are emotionally parched. That contradiction is what makes the novel so haunting.
The blurred line between sacrifice and surrender is one of the novel’s central heartbreaks. Ivona’s decision is framed as noble, but it’s steeped in fear—fear of inadequacy, of being a burden, of not living up to the imagined future she believes Vlaho deserves. Her refusal to speak her truth isn’t just restraint—it’s a kind of disappearance. She vanishes from the relationship without explanation.
It’s a story that challenges the idea that love is always selfless. Sometimes, true love demands vulnerability, not withdrawal. And Hilje seems to suggest that the most painful regrets come not from what we did, but from what we never dared to say.
There’s a profound question, and one that Slanting Towards the Sea never answers outright, but constantly circles. If our choices define us, then Ivona is a woman shaped by absence, by the things she didn’t say, didn’t do, didn’t fight for. And yet, she’s not passive. Her silence is deliberate. Her withdrawal is chosen. That makes her both tragic and powerful.
So how do we define her? Perhaps as a woman who chose dignity over desire, silence over vulnerability, and ended up haunted by both. She’s not a cautionary tale—she’s a reflection of how complex, and sometimes self-destructive, love can be when filtered through fear and pride.
This isn’t a book that shouts—it whispers, aches, and lingers. It’s for readers who appreciate introspective literary fiction, where the most powerful moments are often the quietest. Reading SLANTING TOWARDS THE SEA feels like standing at the edge of something vast and unknowable. It’s introspective, poetic, and deeply human. If your book club is looking for a story that lingers, that invites reflection and conversation, this is the one.
SLANTING TOWARDS THE SEA is a masterclass in subtle storytelling. On the surface, it’s a quiet novel—its pace gentle, its tone restrained—but beneath that stillness lies a powerful emotional current. The silence in this book isn’t empty; it’s charged with grief, longing, and the unspoken truths that shape our lives.
The story follows a woman returning to her coastal hometown, meant to take care of her ailing father. What begins as a simple act of "moving forward" becomes a profound reckoning with memory, identity, and the fragile threads of family. The sea, ever-present and symbolic, mirrors the protagonist’s inner world: calm on the surface, turbulent underneath.
Lidija Hilje’s prose is lyrical and hypnotic, weaving melancholy and memory with precision. It’s not just about lost love—it’s about the cost of silence, the weight of sacrifice, and the fragility of potential. Her eloquence almost acts as a counterpoint to the emotional repression her characters endure.
What makes the novel so compelling is how Hilje uses language to illuminate absence—the things left unsaid, the moments swallowed by pride, fear, or shame. Ivona’s internal monologue is rich and expressive, yet her actual interactions are often clipped, restrained, or evasive. That tension between inner eloquence and outer silence is where the novel truly sings. Hilje seems to understand that language can be both bridge and barrier. Her prose is lush, but her characters are emotionally parched. That contradiction is what makes the novel so haunting.
The blurred line between sacrifice and surrender is one of the novel’s central heartbreaks. Ivona’s decision is framed as noble, but it’s steeped in fear—fear of inadequacy, of being a burden, of not living up to the imagined future she believes Vlaho deserves. Her refusal to speak her truth isn’t just restraint—it’s a kind of disappearance. She vanishes from the relationship without explanation.
It’s a story that challenges the idea that love is always selfless. Sometimes, true love demands vulnerability, not withdrawal. And Hilje seems to suggest that the most painful regrets come not from what we did, but from what we never dared to say.
There’s a profound question, and one that Slanting Towards the Sea never answers outright, but constantly circles. If our choices define us, then Ivona is a woman shaped by absence, by the things she didn’t say, didn’t do, didn’t fight for. And yet, she’s not passive. Her silence is deliberate. Her withdrawal is chosen. That makes her both tragic and powerful.
So how do we define her? Perhaps as a woman who chose dignity over desire, silence over vulnerability, and ended up haunted by both. She’s not a cautionary tale—she’s a reflection of how complex, and sometimes self-destructive, love can be when filtered through fear and pride.
This isn’t a book that shouts—it whispers, aches, and lingers. It’s for readers who appreciate introspective literary fiction, where the most powerful moments are often the quietest. Reading SLANTING TOWARDS THE SEA feels like standing at the edge of something vast and unknowable. It’s introspective, poetic, and deeply human. If your book club is looking for a story that lingers, that invites reflection and conversation, this is the one.
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About the Author:
Lidija Hilje is a Croatian novelist and certified book coach. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times and other outlets. After ten years of trying cases before Croatian courts, she obtained a book coaching certification and has been working professionally with writers ever since. She lives in Zadar, Croatia, with her husband and two daughters. Slanting Towards the Sea is her first novel.
Photograph © Suzy New Life Photography
Lidija Hilje is a Croatian novelist and certified book coach. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times and other outlets. After ten years of trying cases before Croatian courts, she obtained a book coaching certification and has been working professionally with writers ever since. She lives in Zadar, Croatia, with her husband and two daughters. Slanting Towards the Sea is her first novel.
Photograph © Suzy New Life Photography
*Simon & Schuster provided the eARC
in exchange for this unbiased review.
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in exchange for this unbiased review.
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