‘An examination of the ageing male heart — a dissection as subtle and tender as it is, ultimately, unnerving … A wonderfully disconcerting piece of work which, on a second and even a third reading, only seems to grow more expansive and multifaceted while managing at the same time to remain mysterious and tightly furled … If one of the purposes of fiction is to show us ourselves, Wieringa’s mirror is polished to perfection.’
Julie Myerson, The Observer
‘A painful, razor-sharp portrait of what it is to be an ageing man … Beautiful, concise, taut.’
Mariella Frostrup, BBC Radio 4 'Open Book'
‘Brilliant … Merciless in the gentle accuracy with which it asks, very simply and persistently: “What did you think was going to happen?" A Beautiful Young Wife is a book that could derail someone. There's real power in that.’
Cynan Jones, author of The Dig
‘Fiction at its most precise and potent.’
Julie Myerson, The Observer
‘Perfectly dosed prose (translated with elegance by Sam Garrett) and unfaltering narrative control … Wieringa’s lithe 128 pages fill half an afternoon, but days later the figure of our Job-like hero, weeping at his lecture podium, is an unforgettable warning that both romantic as well as scientific endeavours require empathy and imagination.’
The Spectator
‘With this luminous study of a life in slow crisis, Wieringa seems on fertile new ground. He forgoes the motions of cause and effect to give something as profound and puzzling as life itself.'
Sheena Joughin, TLS
‘Brutally precise’
Cathy Rentzenbrink, Stylist
‘Wieringa is a writer with range and skill … Mesmerising.’
Sunday Herald
‘Elegantly written and thoughtful.’
Emerald Street
‘Brilliantly written … the last few pages are mesmerising.’
The Saturday Age
‘Wieringa takes us on a journey deep into the psyche of an ageing male in this potent work … No words are wasted in this thought-provoking love story.’
Herald-Sun
'With his lyrical, sobre dialogue, restrained ambience, formed with well-chosen, evocative words, the author doses drama but the cruelty always pops up with an unexpected blow.'
Corriere della Sera
'A magician at work.'
de Morgen
'Wieringa's masterful depiction of a faltering marriage.'
de Volkskrant
‘A fine-grained look at the soul of a man and his alarming fall from grace.’
WIlliam Leith, Evening Standard
Praise for Tommy Wieringa:
‘The best contemporary novels are a quest made out of literary and moral ambition. Those who have successfully pursued this Holy Grail in recent times are Bolaño with his The Savage Detectives, Sebald in Austerlitz, Coetzee with Disgrace and the late Philip Roth. From now on, to that august list must be added the name of Tommy Wieringa.’
Le Figaro