There are essays of wry wisdom...Jackie Smith's translation shimmers, various as the damselflies.-- "4Columns"
It is hard to imagine a better guide to the resources of hope than Schalansky's deeply engaging inventory.--Michael Cronin "Irish Times"
Twelve fictional essays comprise this stunning work depicting animals, places, objects, and buildings that are lost forever... Not to be read quickly but savored and contemplated.-- "Library Journal (starred)"
Schalansky treats each of the 12 objects cataloged in her new book with an almost religious awe, like a believer giving herself up to be inhabited by spirits.-- "Los Angeles Review of Books"
Brilliant....an ambulatory and often playful meditation on history and forgetting.--Kate Zambreno "New York Times"
Schalansky cements her reputation as a peerless chronicler of the fabulous, the faraway, and the forgotten.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred)"
In rich, evocative, precise prose--beautifully translated from the German by Jackie Smith--Schalansky recalls these lost things and meditates on their destruction, all the while interrogating the extent to which memory--or writing--can compensate for material loss.--Francesa Wade "The Baffler"
A fine example of everyone's favourite genre: the genre-defying book, inspired by history, filtered through imagination and finished with a jeweller's eye for detail.--John Self "The Guardian"
In each case Schalansky has alighted on fascinating material, and her delicately poetic turn of phrase is evident on every page.-- "The Telegraph"
Instead of a requiem for what is gone, Schalansky sings a dirge for what remains.-- "The White Review"
The translation from the German by Jackie Smith...is a triumph of subtle accuracy.-- "Wall Street Journal"
An exploration of extinct animals and objects told through dazzling stories that question the bounds of memory and myth.-- "Kirkus (starred)"
The most wondrous book of the year: by taking the vanished and turning it into a great piece of literature, the author has performed a magical act.-- "Die Zeit"
A celebration of what can still be accomplished with imagination, paper. and ink.--Anthony Doerr
Utterly fascinating.--Rosmarie Waldrop
Disappearance may be a forlorn theme, but it has rarely been granted such reverent contemplation, or been made to feel so powerfully tangible.--Sam Sacks "Wall Street Journal"
Judith Schalansky's An Inventory of Losses and Maria Stepanova's In Memory of Memory are both trying to pin down echoes and build from dust.--Audrey Wollen "Bookforum"
Exquisite. Like the hero of Joris-Karl Huysmans's novel À Rebours, who sets off for London from Paris but realizes he need go no further than the Gare du Nord, Schalansky decides to make a virtue of absence.--Robert Macfarlane