George Saunders is the author of eight books, including the story collections Pastoralia and Tenth of December, which was a finalist for the National Book Award. He has received fellowships from the Lannan Foundation, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, and the Guggenheim Foundation. In 2006 he was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship. In 2013 he was awarded the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in Short Fiction and was included in Time's list of the one hundred most influential people in the world. He teaches in the creative writing program at Syracuse University.
A luminous feat of generosity and humanism. --Colson Whitehead, The New York Times Book Review An extended national ghost story . . . As anyone who knows Saunders's work would expect, his first novel is a strikingly original production. --The Washington Post Saunders's beautifully realized portrait of Lincoln . . . attests to the author's own fruitful transition from the short story to the long-distance form of the novel. --Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times Devastatingly moving. --People Profound, funny and vital . . . the work of a great writer. --Chicago Tribune Heartbreaking and hilarious . . . For all its divine comedy, Lincoln in the Bardo is also deep and moving. --USA Today Along with the wonderfully bizarre, empathy abounds in Lincoln in the Bardo. --Time There are moments that are almost transcendentally beautiful, that will come back to you on the edge of sleep. And it is told in beautifully realized voices, rolling out with precision or with stream-of-consciousness drawl. --NPR Lincoln in the Bardo is part historical novel, part carnivalesque phantasmagoria. It may well be the most strange and brilliant book you'll read this year. --Financial Times A masterpiece. --Zadie Smith Ingenious . . . Saunders--well on his way toward becoming a twenty-first-century Twain--crafts an American patchwork of love and loss, giving shape to our foundational sorrows. --Vogue Saunders is the most humane American writer working today. --Harper's Magazine The novel beats with a present-day urgency--a nation at war with itself, the unbearable grief of a father who has lost a child, and a howling congregation of ghosts, as divided in death as in life, unwilling to move on. --Vanity Fair A brilliant, Buddhist reimagining of an American story of great loss and great love . . . Saunders has written an unsentimental novel of Shakespearean proportions, gorgeously stuffed with tragic characters, bawdy humor, terrifying visions, throat-catching tenderness, and a galloping narrative, all twined around the luminous cord connecting a father and son and backlit by a nation engulfed in fire. --Elle Wildly imaginative. --Marie Claire Mesmerizing . . . Dantesque . . . A haunting American ballad. --Publishers Weekly (starred review) Exhilarating . . . Ruthless and relentless in its evocation not only of Lincoln and his quandary, but also of the tenuous existential state shared by all of us. --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) It's unlike anything you've ever read, except that the grotesque humor, pathos, and, ultimately, human kindness at its core mark it as a work that could come only from Saunders. --The National