"Tóibín is at his lyrical best in The Testament of Mary, a beautiful and daring work...it takes its power from the surprises of its language, its almost shocking characterization, its austere refusal of consolation."--Mary Gordon "The New York Times Book Review"
"[An] exquisite novella...Tóibín gives a familiar story startling intimacy."-- "The New Yorker"
"A heartfelt, powerful work."--Sam Sacks "The Wall Street Journal"
"Dramatic and poetic...A powerful, devastating story."--Ron Charles "The Washington Post"
"Lovely, understated and powerfully sad, The Testament of Mary finally gives the mother of Jesus a chance to speak. And, given that chance, she throws aside the blue veil of the Madonna to become wholly, gloriously human."--Annalisa Quinn "NPR"
"Mary--silent, obedient, observant--has echoed down two millennia, cementing a potent ideal in the Western imagination. Now the masterful Irish writer Colm Tóibín puts a jackhammer to the cozy, safe, Christmas-card version in The Testament of Mary."--Karen R. Long "Cleveland Plain Dealer"
"A slim, grave, exquisitely emotional book...The Testament of Mary is a spellbinding, surprisingly reverent book."--Jeff Giles "Entertainment Weekly"
"Tóibín applies a Joycean ruthlessness...Imagining himself into Mary's interior life is his boldest jump yet."--Hermione Lee "The New York Review of Books"
"Tóibín's intimate approach make Mary feel more credible and human...The result, The Testament of Mary, feels true."--Claire Cameron "The Millions"
"Tóibín suffuses the story with a sense of mystery and makes the reader feel (perhaps as never before) the tragedy of the crucifixion."--Macy Halford "Buzzfeed"
"A deeply, if at times painfully, human portrait of Mary, tearing asunder the robes of red and blue that envelop her in paintings and sculptures."--Michael O'Loughlin "America magazine"
"With this masterly novella, Tóibín has finally tackled the subject of Christianity--and he has done so with a vengeance...Nowhere in this beguiling and deeply intelligent, moving work is Mary's attention to detail more instrumental (and more like a novelist's) than in her account of her son's death...In a single passage--and in a rendition, furthermore, of one of the most famous passages of western literature--Tóibín shows how the telling and the details are all-important."--Robert Collins "Sunday Times (UK)"
"[A] monumental achievement...equally powerful and poignant whether it's read by one who espouses or eschews the New Testament...A tender, soul-rending exploration of a mother's mourning; a searing, stunning work."--Leyla Sanai "The Independent (UK)"
"The Testament of Mary is an important and persuasive book: Tóibín's weary Mary, sceptical and grudging, reads as far more true and real than the saintly perpetual virgin of legend. And Tóibín is a wonderful writer: as ever, his lyrical and moving prose is the real miracle."--Naomi Alderman "Observer (UK)"
"There is a profound ache throughout this little character study, a steely determination coupled with an unbearable loss. Although it has some insightful things to say about religion and the period--the descriptions of the Crucifixion are visceral--it has a universal message about the nature of loss. 'I can tell you now, when you say he redeemed the world, I will say that it was not worth it. It was not worth it.'"--Stuart Kelly "Scotland on Sunday"
"This novel is the Virgin's version of the life of Christ. After a lifetime listening to everyone else's versions of that life, she is angry and frustrated because they are all questionable."--John Spain "Irish Independent"
"A flawless work, touching, moving and terrifying..."--Linda Grant "The New Statesman (UK)"
"Reading this perfect little novella is like watching someone light a candle inside a lantern."-- "The Age (Australia)"
"A stunning interpretation that is as beautiful in its presentation as it is provocative in its intention."-- "Booklist"
"[A] poignant reimagining of the last days of Christ."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"[The Testament of Mary] builds to a provocative climax, one that is as spiritually profound as its prose is plainspoken...A work suffused with mystery and wonder."-- "Kirkus Reviews"