'An almost lyrical intensity...A fierce and disturbing novel.' New York Times 'A haunting, harrowing tale that lingers in the imagination long after you've turned the last page.' Washington Post 'I found it profoundly disturbing, incredibly well-written, and extraordinarily brave. And the fact that it was written by a woman-it has a startling brutality and ferocity about the style that I find very inspiring.' Eimear McBride, The Believer 'At the heart of this acrid trilogy, in all its studied understatement and lack of portentousness, we can feel the author's slow-burning rage at the wholesale erasure of certainty and continuity in the world of her childhood and adolescence. At the same time we sense Kristof saturninely enjoying this annihilation for its imaginative potential. She will reassemble a shattered world on her own rigorous terms, and watch us wince and shudder in the process.' Times Literary Supplement 'In prose stripped to a bare yet powerful structure, this intense parable reveals the triumph of literature in a politically repressive state.' Booklist 'The Notebook is a transfixing house of horrors.' New Statesman 'A dark study of the human psyche.' New York Times Book Review 'Closing this chillingly unsentimental novel, I felt that it had contrived to say absolutely everything about the Second World War and its aftermath in Central Europe.' Sunday Times 'A powerful reminder of the continuing consequences of war and the accommodations every human being makes to survive it, especially within their own psychology.' Stuff NZ 'These novellas are written with great restraint and horrors are noted in understated prose without dwelling on gruesome details. Kristof's trilogy suggests the supposed rage that people must feel when the authorised narrative doesn't mesh with the lived reality.' ANZ LitLovers 'Wildly original in content and tone...The style is simple, almost a series of pronouncements, and the content is uncomfortable and unforgettable.' Adelaide Advertiser 'An extraordinarily powerful work: taut, disciplined, laconic and profoundly unsettling...In The Notebook Trilogy Kristof achieved notable originality. The novel resembles almost nothing, at least in the kind of fiction familiar to English-language readers.' Age