
Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 4 reviews on

"[Grand Hotel Europa] calls to mind Nabokov, Tom Wolfe, Baudrillard, Umberto Eco, Wes Anderson . . . [A novel of] incorrigible high spirits." --Rand Richards Cooper, The New York Times Book Review
A sweeping, atmospheric novel about European identity, centered on a hotel that encapsulates the continent's manifold contradictions.
Praise for Grand Hotel Europa
"One can't help being impressed by how many narrative balls Pfeijffer keeps in the air. The novel combines a comedy of manners with travel journalism, political and cultural commentary, and reflections on European identity. Oh, plus an art-heist mystery (centering on the final days and paintings of Caravaggio)." --Rand Richards Cooper, The New York Times Book Review "An epic new work . . . Pfeijffer's voice is variously comic, tragic, knowledgeable, inspired, and obsessive . . . Characteristically elegant." --Kirkus Reviews "Lively and entertaining . . . Grand Hotel Europa is a fine take on (one big part of) the contemporary European condition, as well as on tourism and the question of authenticity (with considerable overlap across all of these). It's a big, fun read." --M. A. Orthofer, The Complete Review Praise for Ilja Leonard Pfeijffer's La Superba "Pfeijffer's language, as a rule, is remarkable . . . A master of creating tension, suspense, and intrigue through strange situations and well-drawn characters, Pfeijffer . . . continues to ensnare the reader in his labyrinthine novel while his character loses himself in the contradictions of Genoan society. The author wants to leave the reader wanting more, and he does." --Alina Cohen, Los Angeles Review of Books "If Italo Calvino decided to make one of his invisible cities visible, the result might look something like Pfeijffer's Genoa: rooted in the real world of Europe in the age of mass migration, but abstract and mythic enough that the legendary Genoese travelers--Columbus, the Ostrogoths--could still find their way through its labyrinthine streets." --Benjamin Moser, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Sontag: Her Life and Work "Thoroughly compelling and lyrical . . . The stories related throughout La Superba are attention-grabbing and entertaining, sometimes surreal, and at times downright grotesque. But while flirting with the obscene, the novel's rawness also manages to strike a sympathetic chord." --Lindsay Semel, Asymptote