Slyly intelligent...the book's overriding sense of anger and alarm also mingles with satirical glee. Even if she obviously has the apocalyptic drift of the present in sight, De Kretser passes on to the reader the inescapable feeling that she's also having fun, in this
engaging amalgam of lament and warning shot. * The Observer *
Every page of her story feels charged, like an open circuit waiting for its switch; a lurking wallop. It's
magnificent, peerless writing. * Guardian Australia *
A carefully constructed pattern of thematic echoes...filled with
unexpected details, apt quick literary brushstrokes and the gleam of humour. For what it's worth, I'd call it two novellas: but either way, it's terrific. -- Sam Leith * Telegraph *
Scary Monsters is a
provocative and exhilarating game of snakes and ladders * Times Literary Supplement *
Engrossing...a powerful portrait of feeling adrift in a hostile environment, suffused with stabs of beautiful description * The Times *
truly great...brilliant -- Ali Smith * The Guardian *
Ruminative and sly rather than preachy, this novel about complacency and compromise
packs a stealthy bite -- Laura Miller * Slate, 10 Best Books of 2022 *
Written with
incandescent moral energy, profound compassion, and astonishing precision and beauty, Michelle de Kretser's
Scary Monsters extends the very possibilities of the novel form. On the contemporary international scene, there are very, very few writers who can match her style, her intelligence, her vision. To read her is to be changed. -- Neel Mukherjee
In
Scary Monsters de Kretser addresses the weightiest of subjects with the lightest and deftest of touches, and the result is
funny, playful, painful, angry and, above all, ferociously smart. It's
a dazzling novel, by a hugely talented author. -- Sarah Waters
A radically brilliant diptych-novel, in complex conversation with itself and with the world we live in, written by one of the living masters of the art of fiction. A beautifully troubling book.
-- Max Porter
I love the way
Scary Monsters asks urgent questions about what kind of future we might be sleepwalking towards. And heightens the enquiry by looking back; by unsettling and disturbing our sense of where we are now and where we are headed by dissecting - with exquisite deftness - the barely-concealed misogyny and racism of
then, to awaken our senses to
now. It's
a novel of luminous intelligence and profound depth, written with verve, humour and exceptional elegance. -- Monica Ali
Bold, spare and completely original,
one of the most exciting contemporary novels I've read for a very long time. -- Preti Taneja
I read
Scary Monsters months ago and can't stop thinking about it. This is a
bold, unsettling and beautifully written book. -- Emily St. John Mandel
De Kretser is
a wonderful writer...Though her skewering satire is pointed and painful, her gallows humor keeps the reader smiling. -- Claire Messud * Harper's *
Scary Monsters is
a marvel. Each of the two very different parts of the novel had me totally riveted, intensely absorbed, wowed by de Kretser's scathing accuracy - whether she's chronicling youth's delights and distortions or a future where prosperity is the new unethics. It's a
wildly remarkable book that unfolds like no other. -- Joan Silber, author of SECRETS OF HAPPINESS and IMPROVEMENT
[A]n
inventive, satirical and confronting exploration of the migrant experience. * Books + Publishing *
Is it possible we already have the year's best novel? I'll be amazed if anything surpasses this
compulsive, exquisitely light-footed narrative...glorious. * Daily Mail on THE LIFE TO COME *
De Kretser's satirical observations - on the literati, self-congratulation, suburban pretension - are so subtly deboning they remind me of Jane Austen's...
The Life to Come deserves all the gongs we can bang for it. * Spectator on THE LIFE TO COME *
Exhilaratingly good writing...each page yields
sparkling sentences and keen observations. * Literary Review on THE LIFE TO COME *
[de Kretser's] writing captures, with
unflagging wit, grace and subtlety, the spiritual as well as physical journeys of people on the move - between cultures, mindsets and stages of growth. -- Boyd Tonkin * Financial Times on THE LIFE TO COME *
De Kretser clearly relishes demonstrating how close we are to this dystopian future where government hatespokespersons dominate the media and a climate no-policy has already wreaked havoc. What lingers in the mind, however, are the connections she makes between past prejudices and a future society devoid of values or compassion. * Financial Times *