Lyrical and urgent * * The Times * *
Brilliant, highly intelligent, fiercely personal . . . Gorgeous -- URSULA K. LE GUIN
Byatt has made . . . an entire world, compressed but energetically alive in all its details. When we have artists like this, who needs gods? * * Observer * *
Byatt's prose is majestic, the lush descriptive passages - jewelled one minute, gory the next - a pleasure to get lost in * * Sunday Telegraph * *
Surely among the most beautiful and incisive pages Byatt has ever written * * Independent * *
Byatt's writing, impassioned and liberated from the strictures of the novel, has never been so beautiful * * Telegraph * *
Byatt's prose, compact and lyrical, treats the gods with dignity . . . Ragnarok is a clever, lucid, lovely book * * Guardian * *
Byatt enters with gusto and an almost Ted Hughes-like relish for savagery into this primitive world of sorcery and trickery * * Sunday Times * *
Byatt peels back the cover of the book that the girl reads and takes us deep inside it as she delights in reimagining the twilight of the gods and the destruction of the world . . . Like Wagner before her, she dares to dream how the world might end . . . this rewriting of the Ragnarok is a story for our time of overpopulation and anthropomorphic climate change, and of all time * * Financial Times * *
Byatt's retelling of Ragnarok is permeated with the loving familiarity of long acquaintance -- JANE SHILLING * * Evening Standard * *
Colour and sensation flood Byatt's writing . . . One of the most brilliant minds and speakers of our generation * * Independent * *
Byatt paints beautiful and fantastic word-pictures, glittering verbal special effects * * Scotsman * *
Energy and power drip from Byatt's writing . . . Glittering * * New Humanist * *