I read in almost at a sitting, so enjoyable and absorbing it was.
Tremendously enjoyable. Beautifully written. A real pleasure.
A terrific memoir. I particularly enjoyed the descriptions of literary editing, the observations on modern stage production and the childhood recollections in Jerusalem.
Acute, impassioned and dauntingly honest, this is the remarkable story of one of the great observers of our time.
As a record of a fulfilled life, Miriam Gross's account is almost startling - modest and well-written - exemplary. * Spectator *
This memoir has the quality of a long conversation with a very interesting woman - it has enough packed into its 250-odd pages to supply other writers with material for any number of jumbo-sized novels - it is, to use Gross's highest term of literary commendation, so damnably readable. * New Statesman *
***** Riveting - remarkable - Miriam Gross has written far more than a delightfully candid account of her life at the centre of several overlapping power networks. In addition to her perceptive criticisms about literacy levels in schools she has an interesting point to make about the persistence of 'genteel' anti-Semitism in this country. * Mail on Sunday *
Unfailingly intelligent and elegantly written this memoir is absorbing reading - I lapped it up in one sitting. * Daily Telegraph *
Artfully written An Almost English Life achieves what few memoirs might intend - it casts the world rather than the writer into the spotlight. * Financial Times *
Marvellous - Her interviews are classics of the genre. * Standpoint *