"Daniel Kehlmann, the finest German writer of his generation, takes on the life of the eminent film director G.W. Pabst to weave a tragicomic historical fantasia that stretches from Hollywood to Nazi Germany, from Garbo to Goebbels, to show how even a great artist can make, and be unmade by, moral compromises with evil. A dazzling performance and a real page turner."
--Salman Rushdie, author of Knife
"The Director is engrossing and luminous, an epic act of historical imagination and an intimate parable about moral compromise and the seductions of art. After Tyll, I wasn't sure how Kehlmann could possibly top himself. He has. This book is a marvel."
--Ayad Akhtar, author of Homeland Elegies "A wonderful book about complicity and the complicity of art. It's also funny, and brilliant."--Zadie Smith, author of The Fraud, via the Ezra Klein Show
"Daniel Kehlmann is shockingly brilliant, a writer of extraordinary range and grace. At times absurdist, at times horrifyingly realist, The Director asks where the moral duty of the artist resides, and how the narcissism of the artistic project can bleed into complicity."--Lauren Groff, author of The Vaster Wilds
"An incomparably accomplished and inventive piece of fiction by one of the most intelligent novelists at work today." --Jeffrey Eugenides, author of Middlesex