Idiosyncratic and fascinating.--Zadie Smith
A hundred times worth reading.--Penelope Fitzgerald
Vibrant, wonderfully written, funny, and deeply troubled. The writing is effortlessly lyrical, venturing into extraordinary, at times beautiful interludes of philosophical observation. Read Hawthorn & Child. Better still read it twice: it's that real, that good, that true.--Eileen Battersby "The Irish Times"
Brilliantly weird. The novel that has impressed, mesmerized and bamboozled me most this past year is Hawthorn & Child.--Ian Rankin
Once this novel clicks into place, its blend of the heady and the visceral is immersive and compelling.-- "Kirkus"
Sex, lies, and drugs shape the interlocking and recursive narratives in Irish writer Ridgway's marvelous latest, revolving around a set of neighboring London houses. This one sets the reader's mind ablaze.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred review)"
Keith Ridgway's A Shock cleanses the word 'masterpiece' of its current debased meaning of whatever sells in large quantities and returns it to its original sense. A novel about connections missed and made, about things that bring us together and keep us separate, about walls (sometimes literal) and breaches (sometimes literal) in them, about what is porous and what is impermeable, A Shock is formally dazzling, stylistically plural and impeccable, and pulsating with meaning. In an overcrowded field that often feels like looking into a full box of matches, it's like opening one such and discovering a diamond inside. Make no mistake, Ridgway's the Real Thing.--Neel Mukherjee
A sultry, steamy shock of a novel . . .a provocative collection of nine interlinked stories, jostled together like neighbours on a London street or regulars in a pub, which is where most of his characters cross paths.--Susie Mesure "The Spectator"
Ingeniously slippery--what initially looks like a collection of loosely linked short stories reveals itself to be an expertly constructed house of mirrors....A Shock is the kind of novel that rewards multiple readings, new echoes and connections revealing themselves each time. And, in the same way that one character describes the unsettling, near-hallucinatory side effects of doing certain drugs -- "it's just peripheral, corner of the eye stuff, movements" -- you get the sense of myriad other lives unfolding around those described here, all tantalizingly out of sight.--Lucy Scholes "New York Times Book Review"
A Shock is a meticulously crafted diorama, built on a scale that's at once claustrophobic and expansive, running through cycles that are by turns bleak, hilarious, chilling and hopeful, and culminating in an ingenious finale that sees it consume its own tale.--Louie Conway "Vanity Fair"
Like Finnegans Wake, only readable.--John Self "London Times"
Endlessly interesting.--Anthony Cummins "The Observer"
At first it seems we might be in a book of interlinked stories, but discovering you aren't quite where you thought you might be is part of the deliberate disorientation of A Shock. It soon becomes clear that the sections in the novel don't interlink so much as echo and rhyme. The observation is acute, the dialogue sparkles, the movement between interiority and surveillance is deft. It is a novel of in-between places that keeps the reader off-balance to surprising, intelligent and sometimes eerie effect.--Kamila Shamsie, (Citation for the 2021 Goldsmiths Prize shortlist)
Don't call it a novel in stories or a collection; just call it the Irish writer's masterpiece.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Keith Ridgway's new novel A Shock bends the rules of plot and time.--Zack Kopp "Rain Taxi"