"Karl Ove Knausgaard frames aging here as a kind of descent into Buddhism: the mindful enlightenment of marinating in the now. His new book is, accordingly, a series of short meditations on everyday things like plastic bags, frogs and war. ('War is both the simple shape of the arrowhead and the complicated life that it annihilates.') I happened to turn 40 last week, and Knausgaard's claim rings true for me."-- New York Times Magazine
"It's a sentimental week for parent readers. Fans of Karl Ove Knausgaard's sprawling and often dark six-volume autobiographical novel, 'My Struggle, ' might be surprised to find the author showing his short-and-sweet side in 'Autumn, ' a slender book of essays about the material world addressed to his daughter." -- New York Times, 10 Books We Recommend This Week
"In these secular meditations, Knausgaard scratches away at the ordinary to reach the sublime -- finding what's in the picture, and what's hidden." --Washington Post
"For all his rapturous passages of ecstasy and agony, Karl Ove Knausgaard can also make you laugh ... Autumn glows." -- The Economist "Even more than in "My Struggle," he seems to inhabit every age simultaneously: He is boy, adolescent, and father at once.... If hard truths insist on hiding in the deep, these essays suggest, a hand-line will do as well as a drift net to haul them in."--The Boston Globe