A provocative new way of thinking about biography... The radial structure vibrates, like Hitchcock's best films, with intuition and mystery. -- Parul Sehgal - The New York Times
Edward White's The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock is a pinata of literary pleasures. Learned and graceful, thoughtful and provocative, White cracks the Hitchcock code with deft analysis and fine writing. It's a high-stepping performance full of humor and depth. Walking a tightrope between criticism and biography, White places both the man and his myth in the cultural landscape of his times. In the process, he returns us to the films with a much more informed eye. A book to keep and to return to. -- John Lahr, author of Tennessee Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh
Perceptive and gracefully written, The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock is a bracing study of the master of suspense... It is a rare book that could pleasurably be twice as long. -- The Economist
[The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock] is full of such sharp observations, offering a Hitchcock whose art endures alongside-and in some ways depends upon-his insecurities and mistakes. -- Farran Smith Nehme - The Wall Street Journal
White combines his interpretive zest with sensitivity, clarity and knife-sharp phrasing, smartly dedicating each of his 12 chapters to a different facet of the director's personality: the voyeur, the entertainer, the womaniser, the family man... Anatomising someone of Hitchcock's stature risks an equally chaotic frenzy of stabs, but with these 12 scalpel strokes White cuts close to his subject's heart. -- Victoria Segal - The Sunday Times
... innovative biography of Alfred Hitchcock... Tracking Hitchcock's contemporary influence, White is an enterprising tour guide... I was happy to be reminded of Cornelia Parker's PsychoBarn, constructed in 2016 on the roof of the Metropolitan Museum in New York... And thanks to White, I went on an excursion to Leytonstone, Hitchcock's birthplace in east London... I was also pleased to learn from White about the lewd Hitchcock tribute in Eminem's Music to Be Murdered By. -- Peter Conrad - The Observer
The great strength of The Twelve Lives is that a reader comes away from it with a vivid sense of how Hitchcock ignited screen masterpieces with the fires of his inner discord and contradictions. -- Alexander Kafka - The Washington Post
... a fascinating new study... [The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock] is overflowing with anecdotes, memories and curiosities... the book offers lots of insights into what made him such a revolutionary director of masterpieces such as North by Northwest and Rear Window. -- Martin Chilton, Books of the Month May 2021 - The Independent
Rather than forcing Hitchcock's often contradictory guises into a coherent whole, this deft account takes them as a starting point. The result is a nuanced and frequently unfamiliar portrait. Essays on the director's sartorial and culinary preoccupations and his penchant for publicity-chapter headings include The Fat Man and The Dandy-yield new perspectives on a multifaceted career. -- Briefly Noted - The New Yorker
... masterful study... There have been thousands of books about Hitchcock. This is the best of the bunch, a brilliant investigation of a man full both of ego and fragile self-esteem, a sour mixture of self-disgust and self-regard. Hitchcock was aware that under anyone's calm surface, dark forces were 'springing and swirling within'. To investigate these notions, White chops up his book into a dozen highly original chapters homing in on such themes as Hitchcock the Fatty, the Dandy, the Voyeur, the Cockney, and so forth. -- Roger Lewis - The Daily Mail
Running the gamut from 'The Boy Who Couldn't Grow Up' to 'The Man Of God', White's book... deftly divvies up the director's 80 years into a dozen readable chunks. If Hitch was, as this author suggests, a codex of his times, this is as good a way as any to decipher him. -- Neil Smith - Total Film
White's book is a perceptive, plainspoken, and vigorous portrait of an exceedingly strange, complicated, and perhaps deeply wounded man. -- John Banville - New Republic
It's an elegant, divertingly readable performance... it's the affinities, the connecting threads and evocative side-glances with which White salts his text that repeatedly spark new insights into both the man and his work... as this entertaining and provocative book shows, a lot of satisfaction can be derived from exploring the mystery. -- Philip Kemp - Sight & Sound