"Finally, a brilliantly funny and sad look into the heart of the pandemic lockdown... [that] manages to avoid cliches and tired complaints while being reassuringly familiar at the same time... Characters, settings and even whole scenes are drawn in quick, exquisite precision full of wit and pathos. Its intimacy reminded me of Sally Rooney and its subtle, sly humor of Miriam Toews' All My Puny Sorrows... a reassuring reflection in the darkness." -San Francisco Chronicle "Pollard is the author of six poetry collections, and her talents are on display as information and anecdotes unfurl with pleasing syntactic turns... Delphi distills something elusive and upsetting about all the things we can't quite see or understand about the present moment, even as all we ever do is look. This feels impressive, part of what good fiction is meant to do."-Lynn Steger Strong, New York Times Book Review "Anyone who feels tapped out on pandemic fiction, I urge you to give Claire Pollard's debut novel, Delphi a try. It tackles COVID-19 in a darkly funny way that avoids the dreary dystopian fatalism that afflicts much of mainstream fiction these days... This book does a superb job of providing perspective by connecting our present moment to ancient history in a way that's clever and surprising. For Fans of Jenny Offill, Ottessa Moshfegh and Sally Rooney, here's another hot sad girl book to add to your list." -BuzzFeed "For anyone looking for ways of thinking creatively and with love about art in an emergency and what just happened to us all... I would recommend [Delphi], because despite the bleakness - you can't have realism without bleakness now - this is clever, warm and funny writing." -The Guardian "A deeply intimate story, told in the language of maternal love, of fear, and, especially, of prophecy... From a politics gone topsy-turvy to disrupted domestic routines and interrupted life cycles, the novel vividly portrays what happens when everything stops working all at once, including the authorities we look to for succor and the stories we tell ourselves to cope." -Los Angeles Review of Books "This isn't the first - and most certainly won't be the last - pandemic novel, but it might be the most brilliant... Pollard's novel is consistently inspired, and will keep you gripped all the way through to the heart-stopping finale." -Daily Mail "Ingenious." -The Millions "A powerful fable about life in an ever-more unpredictable world." -Harper's Bazaar "[A] richly layered debut novel... effectively conveys the first year of the pandemic...the main character's frustration and fear is sure to strike a chord." -Publisher's Weekly "Inviting, stylish and candid... So many of Pollard's sentences ring with delicious wryness... It is the freshness of this narrator's perspective and the openness with which this perspective is shared that suggests that Pollard's future, as a novelist, is very bright indeed. -i "[An] exquisitely painful debut... Pollard's deft inclusion of all the pandemic's practical and political challenges-masks, vaccines, social distancing, the strain on shared home WiFi networks, long separations from aging parents, the 2020 U.S. presidential election, and January 6-is wrapped in the inventive framework of prophecies. Irresistible and also oddly reassuring for all who have come through (so far) to the other side of COVID's miseries." -Library Journal "We need the ancients to explain today to us, and we need Clare Pollard. In brief, brilliant passages, Pollard confronts the shadow-play of our screen-entranced lives, and offers this simultaneous comfort and curse: we are not the first to live these griefs and these bewilderments. Delphi is the strangest, best thing I've read in ages." -Rachel Kadish, author of The Weight of Ink "Clare Pollard's Delphi delivers an urgency unlike any I've experienced. I loved this book so much; the language, the humor, the style, which reminded me of both Patricia Lockwood and Sheila Heti. A b...