Genius. . . . Remarkable and resonant. . . . The right novel for the end of the world. Los Angeles Times
Tiny in size but immense in scope, radically disorienting yet reassuringly humane, strikingly eccentric and completely irresistible. . . . Luminous. The Boston Globe
Brilliant. . . . Offill s writing is often brisk and comic, and her book s format underlines her gifts. . . . Weather is her most soulful book. . . . Offill s humor is saving humor; it s as if she s splashing vinegar to deglaze a pan. The New York Times Book Review
Darkly funny and urgent. . . . Offill is a master of the glancing blow. NPR
"Jenny Offill is the master of novels told in sly, burnished fragments. . . . In Offill s hands, the form becomes something new . . . a method of distilling experience into its brightest, most blazing forms atoms of intense feeling. . . . These fragments feel like: teeming worlds suspended in white space, entire novels condensed into paragraphs. . . . What she is doing is coming as close as anyone ever has to writing the very nature of being itself." Parul Sehgal, The New York Times Weather holds its own with the strongest examples of the new non-speculative climate fiction. It has the feel of a classic, the kind of book that future humans will read in order to figure out what people were thinking in the early decades of the twenty-first century. Los Angeles Review of Books
Glorious, dizzying, disconcerting and often laugh-out-loud hysterical. USA Today
Time flies by in this wry story of a family librarian Lizzie, her classics buff husband, their son, and her brother, a recovering addict. Apocalypse (climate and otherwise) looms over the narrative, and yet it is funny and hopeful too. Vanity Fair
[Weather] solidifies the author's place among the vanguard of writers who are reinvigorating literature. O, The Oprah Magazine
Compact and wholly contemporary, Jenny Offill s third novel sees a librarian find deep meaning and deep despair in her side gig as an armchair therapist for those in existential crisis. . . . A canny, comic story about the power of human need. Esquire
An eerily realistic reflection on what it feels like to exist in a bubble of nonstop information. Time A beach read for those who like to worry about the beaches. . . . This is a pre-apocalyptic novel, and its subject is dread, not disaster. The Nation
Like a sort of literary shadow box, the novel collects images and instances from the past few years, with the 2016 election as a clarifying point in this picture of a fraught and fragmenting world. . . . One of the wonders of Offill s writing is that her light touch lets us glimpse the very real dread lurking underneath. Minneapolis Star Tribune
Offill has achieved the near impossible. She has made grappling with the climate crisis not only important and challenging but also, a tough assignment, entertaining. The Toronto Star Another perfectly wonderful trip inside the mind of Jenny Offill. . . . [Her] fiction is such a pleasure to read. . . . The funniness of many of her sentences indicates how precisely she calibrates them. Slate
JENNY OFFILL is the author of the novels Last Things (a New York Times Notable Book of the Year and a finalist for the Los Angeles Times First Fiction Award) and Dept. of Speculation, which was shortlisted for the Folio Prize, the Pen-Faulkner Award, and the International Dublin Literary Award. She lives in upstate New York and teaches at Syracuse University and in the low-residency program at Queens University.