Donna Tartt is an American author who has achieved critical and public acclaim for her novels, which have been published in forty languages. Her first novel, The Secret History, was published in 1992. In 2003 she received the WH Smith Literary Award for her novel, The Little Friend, which was also nominated for the Orange Prize for Fiction. She won the Pulitzer Prize and the Andrew Carnegie Medal for Fiction for her most recent novel, The Goldfinch.
Another rich slice of gothic drama
*Sunday Times*
Combines narrative grandeur with dazzling detail
*Guardian*
Sublimely written, with elegant touches of the gothic
*The Times*
Really does grip from the first page... a noirish thriller and epic
love story rolled into one
*Daily Mail*
Runs the gamut from thriller to meditation on loss, and runs it
magnificently
*Sunday Telegraph*
A soaring masterpiece
*Washington Post*
The Goldfinch is a triumph... Donna Tartt has delivered an
extraordinary work of fiction
*Stephen King*
Sumptuous, generous and entirely captivating
*Independent*
Dazzling. A glorious, Dickensian novel that pulls together all
Tartt's remarkable storytelling talents into a rapturous, symphonic
whole and reminds the reader of the immersive, stay-up-all-night
pleasures of reading
*New York Times*
An astonishing achievement. If anyone has lost their love of
storytelling, The Goldfinch will most certainly return it to them.
The last few pages of the novel take all the serious, big,
complicated ideas beneath the surface and hold them up to the
light. Not for Tartt the kind of clever riffs which are too
commonly found in contemporary fiction. Instead, when plot comes to
an end, she leads us to a place just beyond it - a place of
meaning
*Guardian*
The Goldfinch is a book about art in all its forms, and right from
the start we remember why we enjoy Donna Tartt so much: the humming
plot and elegant prose; the living, breathing characters; the
perfectly captured settings.... Joy and sorrow exist in the same
breath, and by the end The Goldfinch hangs in our stolen heart
*Vanity Fair*
Lavish and lush in décor and span... The novel lets us see, and
feel, the real bird beyond the brush, or rather, the grief, and
addictive yearning, behind its cabinet of curiosities. For those
who want to share the double vision, to slip attentively between
luxurious illusion and overt craftiness, a deeper layer of pleasure
awaits in The Goldfinch. In every sense, this is quite a piece of
work
*Independent*
In the epic range of its concerns with grief, loss, loneliness,
fate, and the nature of good and evil, its rich cast of characters,
and its broad social canvas, it bears comparison with Proust,
Dickens, Dostoevsky and Nabokov. It is meticulously structured and
paced, and reading it is an enthralling experience of total
immersion in Tartt's vision and voice. A beautiful and important
book
*Prospect*
A gripping page-turner and a challenging, beautifully written
account of modern life. Moving but unsentimental, funny without
being trite, all human life is here. It will doubtless be a
contender for one of 2013's best novels
*Independent on Sunday*
A modern epic and an old-fashioned pilgrimage, a nimble thrill-seek
and heavyweight masterpiece. And if it doesn't gain Tartt entry to
the mostly boys' club that is The Great American Novel, to drink
with life-members John Steinbeck, Harper Lee, Saul Bellow, Philip
Roth et al, then we should close down the joint and open up another
for the Great Global Novel - for that is what this is
*The Times*
It is the extraordinary depth of detail and wholeness of her
imagining that makes it such an impressive work... Utterly
absorbing, a superb novel
*Daily Mail*
Mysterious and mercurial, The Goldfinch finally reveals itself as a
rare bird - a highbrow fable and a page-turner
*Mail on Sunday*
Without doubt a beguiling novel. It is smart - in both the British
and American senses of that word - brilliantly readable, thrilling
and touching
*New Statesman*
Like a Dutch painting, every scene is described in glittering
detail and framed with retrospective melancholy. A modern-day David
Copperfield... The Goldfinch is impressive - lavish, gripping,
exciting
*Financial Times*
A novel of the highest literary ambition and dedication
*Evening Standard*
Donna Tartt engineers a recklessly impressive plot... The
precocious talent that fired up her cult debut The Secret History
is on full display here
*Sunday Telegraph*
Written with precision and thoughtfulness, it's at once a
slow-burner, with Tartt lingering over scenes and descriptions and
building the story in detail, and an attention-grabber... The
Goldfinch is built up in careful brushstrokes into an absorbing,
epic tale of deepening shadows
*Metro*
From the opening pages it grabs you by the scruff of the neck and
does not let you go . . . It has layer upon layer of psychological
detail and emotion
*Red*
This book is so beautifully written, you'll want to simultaneously
read it at top speed to find out what happens, and savour it
*Marie Claire*
A large-canvas, small-brush picaresque that's both heart-rending
and irresistibly wicked
*Vogue*
Where to begin? Simply put, I'm indescribably jealous of any reader
picking up this masterpiece for the first time. And once they do,
they will long remember the heartrending character of Theo Decker
and his unthinkable journey
*Sarah Jessica Parker*
A long-awaited, elegant meditation on love, memory, and the
haunting power of art... Eloquent and assured, with memorable
characters... A standout and well-worth the wait
*Kirkus (starred review)*
A massively entertaining, darkly funny book that goes a long way
toward explaining why its author is finally securing her place
alongside the greatest American novelists of the past half century,
including John Updike, Philip Roth, Toni Morrison, and that other
latter-day Dickensian, John Irving... Required reading for anyone
who loves great literature from this or any other century
*USA Today*
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