Ullmann's prose... is plain, succinct and declarative, with currents of intensity flowing beneath the placid surface. The effect, in Thilo Reinhard's graceful English translation, is almost Didionesque, as the willed, witty detachment of the narrator's voice at once conceals and emphasizes the rawness of her emotions. -- New York Times Book Review
Precise, lean, cadenced sentences... [Unquiet] believably conveys the feeling-dreadful, delightful-of a child's point of view. The clarity and lack of fetter is characteristic of Ullmann's way of seeing the world in prose. -- Wyatt Mason - New York Times Magazine
[An] exquisite and warm novel... Among Norway's contemporary writers, Ullmann might be the finest sentence by sentence. Here she blasts her story into fragments and puts it back together, piece by piece, with the artistry of someone who has always secretly known the broken things are most beautiful. -- LitHub
Unquiet is a wonderfully absorbing and moving family story told with a directness, naturalness, and grace that can only result from Linn Ullmann's close attention to the eloquent details of day-to-day life, her honest embrace of herself and the people close to her, and a keen sensitivity to language and the high demands of good writing. -- Lydia Davis, author of The End of the Story
I've long admired Linn Ullmann's fiction, and Unquiet is her masterpiece. Based on her upbringing as the child of two great artists, it is the portrait of complex loves; of a youth divided and inspired by diametrically opposed creative influences; and of the ravages of age. Calm yet fierce, exquisitely rendered, this novel imprints itself indelibly-as if you, too, had been there. -- Claire Messud, author of The Burning Girl
Ullmann moves deftly between narrative selves over time-from the little girl's raw bewilderments to the adult's reflective meditations. Unquiet is a beautiful book about the emotion and the art of memory. -- Siri Hustvedt, author of The Blazing World
With singular imagination and generosity, Linn Ullmann breaks new ground in the art of memory, transporting us into the sources of magic in her life with her enchanting parents. -- Honor Moore, author of The Bishop's Daughter
Spellbinding... Echoing Duras's The Lover in its blurring of the real and the imagined as well as in its obsessive attention to detail, this is a striking book about the enduring love between parents and children, and the fierce attachments that bind them even after death. -- Publishers Weekly (starred review)
A brilliant meditation on time, mortality, and the limits of memory... Gorgeous and heartbreaking. -- Kirkus (starred review)
Gracefully exquisite, sharply funny, and richly poignant... Ullmann's homage to family, art, beauty, and love is resplendently vital, and enchantingly evocative. -- Booklist