A fantastic writer - compassionate, funny and fearless . . . inspires us to look more closely at life, and be more caring * George Saunders *
What is so impressive is how Shepard extrapolates what's constant
about the human condition . . . The result is
as warm as it is devastating, and somehow exorcises existential terror . . . Shepard's characters may not endure, but
his prose will. -- Jamie Fisher * Times Literary Supplement *
Scrupulously researched and sumptuous in detail . . . This collection delivers that beguiling dichotomy of what we understand from history - the pointlessness of our experiences in the cosmos - yet the universality of our most intimate experiences: our crises of conscience, our secret desires, our fragility. -- Ruth McKee * Irish Times *
Remarkable for their sheer range . . .
Everything he writes is enriched by an underlying magnanimity. -- Phil Baker * Sunday Times *
In ten meticulously researched stories, Shepard elegantly places the emotional dilemmas of morose, melancholy, misunderstood characters against backdrops that emphasise the vastness of the world and the smallness of their hopes and dreams . . .
Wonderful -- Eithne Farry * Daily Mail *
Retelling 'real' stories is Shepard's forte. He is a dramatist with a reporter's dispassion. The measured tone is pitch
perfect. There is no sense of sensationalism, no over-emoting, no embellishment. He lets his facts do the talking and in several of the stories in The World to Come the effect is devastating and affecting . . . He is a terrific writer whose arrival on these shores is long overdue.
-- Alan Taylor * Glasgow Herald *
Greedier writers would spin entire novels out of just one of the richly weird, hilariously bizarre premises that distinguish a Jim Shepard story. His stories can be set in any corner of the world, at any era in time, and there is no oddment or calamity of the human experience Shepard does not find fascinating.
His stories are droll, action packed, ingenious and finally moving. * Colin Barrett *
An outrageously versatile and gifted fiction writer, Shepard continues his original, precise exploration of times and places long ago and far, far away . . . Shepard's project is always to push toward that sense of wonder and the 'high hopefulness' of purpose that ordinary people have always brought to the project of living - to
give us through fiction a sense of profound empathy that the historical record alone cannot.
He most stunningly succeeds * Washington Post *
Like Alice Munro, Shepard has a knack for compressing a novel's worth of life into thirty or forty pages . . . It all adds up to a peculiar yet arresting vision, as Shepard lets you see a startling variety of dangers and conundrums through the eyes of characters who, poignantly or even despairingly, can't quite summon the humanity that's hidden away in them * Boston Globe *
This is what you get with Shepard's short stories -
weight and validity, lingo and precision . . . This approach gives the individual stories heft and the collections a dizzying range . . . What impresses is his ability to convey compressed, cinematic action. He knows when to pop rivets and bend structures, add histrionics as well as saltwater stocism . . . Shepard's beautifully researched creations inhabit different eras * New York Times *
Ten exceptionally powerful tales of courageous responsibility and criminal indifference . . . Throughout this
masterful, profoundly involving collection, Shepard elucidates with stirring precision the emotions of characters ambushed by terrifying powers beyond their control * Booklist *
Let's hope Jim Shepard becomes as influential as he should be. He's
the best we've got * Dave Eggers *
His insight is humbling, deeply grained, outrageously perceptive and full of a signature humour . . . If you haven't read Shepard, you should, because he's also
one of the US's finest writers, full of wit, humanity and fearless curiosity . . . It's a hell of a thing to walk the earth with Jim Shepard -- Joshua Ferris * Guardian *
[An]
American master * O, the Oprah Magazine *