'Jon McGregor's stories are strange and lovely masterpieces' Sarah Hall
'McGregor is the nearest thing you will ever come across to a literary Beethoven. Words go beyond being tools of his trade and become an orchestrated, inspired and precisely designed tone poem for each creative idea ... One of the most perfect pieces of written English I have ever come across' Sunday Express
'Jon McGregor writes with frightening intelligence and impeccable technique. Every page is a revelation' Teju Cole
'Sharp, dark and hugely entertaining, this collection establishes McGregor as one of the most exciting voices in short fiction' Observer
'Set in and around the fens, these wickedly brilliant stories are as black as the local soil ... Throughout, omissions and ellipses set the mind racing like a treacherous tide, rushing in to fill the gaps. Not a book for bedtime, then. But very, very good indeed' Daily Mail
'To the anxious literary festival audience member - and anyone else feeling downcast about the state of the short story today - I say, read Jon McGregor's new book. Its verve, its inventiveness, its sheer quiet audacity will reassure you that the short story is alive, well and reaching new heights' Maggie O'Farrell, Guardian
'Haunting and brilliant' Independent
'A writer alive to the lithe life of language ... A huge talent' Sunday Times
'A striking collection ... the prose is picked clean, pellucid' Sunday Telegraph
'McGregor's prose is as sparse as the countryside it has alighted on, with barely a simile or metaphor in sight' Literary Review
'There is a lot to chew over and a lot that stays in the mind' Psychologies
Jon McGregor is the author of five novels and two story collection. He is the winner of the IMPAC Dublin Literature Prize, Betty Trask Prize, and Somerset Maugham Award, and has been longlisted for the Man Booker Prize three times. He is Professor of Creative Writing at the University of Nottingham, where he edits The Letters Page, a literary journal in letters. He was born in Bermuda in 1976, grew up in Norfolk, and now lives in Nottingham.