A dark, noirish literary mystery with an entirely unique detective-heroine. The characters stayed with me long after I had finished the book. I'm not sure I've ever read anything like it, which alone is reason to celebrate.--Anita Shreve, author of The Stars Are Fire
From the outset, Origin makes you want to know how it all ends--and begins...Abu-Jaber certainly has her finger on the pulse of what makes a memorable thriller: smart, spare writing, strong character development and nail-nibbling suspense. Setting the story during a long, dark upstate New York winter amplifies the foreboding, elegiac tone.--Olivia Barker "USA Today"
Beautiful prose makes this one special.-- "People"
A mystery of cold beauty and dark isolation, written with crystalline precision...haunting and compelling...It's a little film noir, a bit independent-woman-detective thriller, and winningly fresh in its approach.--Amy Driscoll "Miami Herald"
[A] gripping mystery.--Elissa Schappell "Vanity Fair"
With prose as cool as a razor yet as wildly impressionistic as a fever dream, Diana Abu-Jaber takes us deeply into Lena Dawson and her search for a killer that must first begin in the lost forest of her own psyche. Origin is a gripping exploration of the elusive nature of identity and one's own remembered past, the innocent and guilty alike. This is a superbly written and utterly compelling novel.--Andre Dubus III, author of Gone So Long and House of Sand and Fog
Riveting...Heartbreaking questions--of mothers and daughters, and of love withheld and given--lie at the heart of this thoughtful, multilayered novel.--Adam Woog "Seattle Times"
Abu-Jaber is a gifted and graceful writer, deft at evoking a scene and creating pace that almost turns the pages itself...This novel's characters are complex and vividly drawn.--Jessica Treadway "Chicago Tribune"
Origin is a haunting story, icy cold in its upstate New York setting but glowing with the unusual brightness of its heroine...What propels Lena's story is the delicate, balanced, engrossing way Abu-Jaber perfectly intertwines Lena's personal story with that of the case she's investigating and sets both threads in a Syracuse so vivid you envision it without even trying.--Molly Templeton "Eugene Weekly"