Quotes
“Dark and intriguing…A highly clever, original
book.” Daily Mail (London)
“A powerful story, sensitively told…A terrifying
tale about the stories we hear and the stories we tell ourselves to understand
our experiences…It’s impossible not to find yourself racing through the pages,
desperate to discover the connections…heartbreaking and heart-racing.” Times (London)
“Atmospheric and beautifully written…A subtle and thoughtful
novel. It seems soon to call it, but Gretel and the Dark will
be one of the best books of 2014.” List (London)
“As haunting, lyrical, and enchanting as the fairy tales Krysta is so
taken with, Granville’s bittersweet first novel will keep readers
hooked, guessing and wondering how Lilie and Krysta’s stories relate,
right up to the end.” Library Journal (starred review)
“Gretel and the Dark is a lyrical masterpiece of fantasy, horror,
childhood innocence, and the evils of both our innermost imaginings and our
shared history. The chilling, fantastical tale will simultaneously entertain
and provoke serious contemplation on the depths of human depravity.” Shelf Awareness (starred review)
“This book weaves two stories: one set in Vienna in 1899,
narrated by Stefan Rudnicki; the second set in Germany in the early 1940s,
narrated by Cassandra Campbell. Having two narrators helps the listener follow
two plots that become entwined as the story progresses. Rudnicki deftly
portrays a staid psychoanalyst with a somewhat pedantic and detached attitude
who encounters a puzzling patient in Vienna. Campbell portrays a naïve, young
woman in Germany years later who lives in her imagination, which is full of
dark fairy tales. Campbell’s steady narration intensifies the contrasts between
appearance and reality, hope and despair as she creates an understated and
haunting atmosphere. Winner of the AudioFile Earphones Award.” AudioFile
“Granville weaves her
two tales together through lush prose; her novel is both a thoroughly engaging
journey into the darkest corners of humanity, as well as an illumination of the
redemptive power of the imagination.” Publishers Weekly
“In Gretel and the Dark, Eliza
Granville masterfully entwines two richly layered and compelling stories of two
seemingly different worlds. Filled with remarkable historical detail and
stunning prose, both Krysta’s and Lilie’s stories captivated me, and Granville
kept me quickly turning the pages to discover the connection between these two
girls. By turns beautiful and frightening, magical and dark, this is a novel
that will stay with me for a long time to come.” Jillian Cantor, author of Margot