"You can feel the delight Hoare takes in being unbound by anything but his enthusiasms. He is alternately precise and concealing. His biographical sections are both elliptical and redolent of entire lives. Somehow, Hoare's frequent cuts between the present, the recent(ish) past and more distant history end up feeling like no cuts at all; instead of whiplash or disorientation, what results is an almost calm feeling of all these times existing simultaneously, in the moment of reading. Albert and the Whale will pull you in like the tide."--John Williams "New York Times"
"In his typically allusive and impish style, Hoare has unfurled a whole tapestry of lives connected to Dürer's work and its themes. He extrapolates an entire cosmology, a way of seeing the world every bit as rich and penetrating as Dürer's." --Charles Arrowsmith "The Washington Post"
"I doubt that any other writer has grasped so deeply the feral, sensual undercurrent of Dürer's art or has felt so acutely the artist's attunement to the fierce animals that live in his works: the bony, narrow-headed dogs; the hirsute walrus, seemingly as ancient as the world itself; the armored rhino, as big as a house, menacing in its hardened, ornamented glory. Albert and the Whale is full of such unexpected insights into Dürer's art, expressed with epigrammatic force and clarity. It is perhaps Dürer's greatest achievement (and now also Mr. Hoare's) to have shown us that this fantastical world is not so strange after all, that, in its fearsome splendor, it must be ours too." --Christoph Irmscher "Wall Street Journal"
"This beautifully eclectic book is so much more than a biography of the great artist. This is a book to immerse you. Like the sea in which its author swims daily, it braces and embraces. It beckons us ever on."--Rachel Campbell-Johnston "The Times"
"A magnificent new book. Hoare summons [historical figures] like Prospero, his writing the animating magic that brings the people of the past directly into our present and unleashes spectacular visions along the way."--Laura Cumming "The Guardian"
"Albert and the Whale is visionary: a tone poem put together from the lives of others. This book is all about shockwaves... Hoare is intoxicated by Dürer's version of the natural world, which threatens to be more vivid, more essential than the real thing. This harmonious and enviably conceived book manages it with full marks."--Jonathan McAloon "Financial Times"
"From Dürer to David Bowie, a delightfully eclectic study of the natural world and art." --Michael Prodger "The Sunday Times"
"Marvelous, unaccountable. Its strange charisma, the book's fluidity, the unpredictability of which disrupts everything, transmuting whatever is steeped in it into something rich and strange."--Kathryn Murphy "Literary Review"
"Although it centers on Dürer's life and work, Hoare summons up numerous other figures - from Luther and Shakespeare to David Bowie - and somehow makes them relevant to the Renaissance painter. A book of dazzling insight and liquid beauty, Albert and the Whale is Hoare's greatest work yet."-- "The Week"
"Hoare's deep and illuminating responses to Du]rer's iconic self-portraits and empathic portraits of animals inspire questions of sexuality and of our use and abuse of other species, especially whales. In contemplating Du]rer's virtuoso skills and gripping 'vision of the dark, the beautiful, and the strange' and sharing his own immersive appreciation of nature and art, Hoare forges a new, reorienting, and exhilarating perspective."-- "Booklist"
"In Albert and the Whale Hoare moves beyond his own hand, which has hitherto brought hybrid biographies, memoirs and tremendous books on the sea and whales, to make something reckless, marvelous and unforgettable. Dürer would have loved it. So will you."--Horatio Clare "The Spectator"
"If Albert and the Whale were a room, it would be an alchemist's laboratory with a stuffed crocodile suspended from the ceiling, full of freaks and fascinations, reef-encrusted in time. Hoare's lush imaginings sweep you through 500 years on a sea of connections."--Sue Prideaux "New Statesman"
"A visionary, encyclopedic, erudite and poetic book."--Colin Eisler, Robert Lehman Professor, NYU Institute of Fine Arts, author of Dürer's Animals
"More slippery than a straight biography, the book instead swoops cormorant-like into Dürer's life and times. Albert and the Whale glitters with arresting details." -- "The Economist"
"This idiosyncratic account of the life, work, and afterlife of the Renaissance artist Albrecht Dürer considers how art imagines our world. Hoare shows Dürer's responsiveness to his times, and places his subject in a surprising lineage of artists including William Blake, Marianne Moore, Thomas Mann, and Andy Warhol. These comparisons elucidate Dürer's radicalism, and establish him as a revolutionary and thoroughly modern artist. Hoare writes, 'Before Dürer, dragons existed; after him, they did not.'"-- "The New Yorker"
"A masterpiece, a riot, a meditation, an illumination, and most definitely for reasons that will be apparent when you live inside its pages, a day at the beach."--Simon Schama
"I loved this new book by Philip Hoare. It's a rare adventure in reading, drawing us into a swirl of narratives that mingle and resonate. The author is always there, as art critic, historian of culture, naturalist, biographer, and memoirist. His supple voice grounds the stories, with images and refractions of Albrecht Dürer rarely far from view. The rhythms of the prose are deft, seductive. What a fine achievement!"--Jay Parini, author of "Borges and Me"