'Unique and spellbinding ... Brockmeier is up to something different' (Minneapolis Star Tribune )
'Brockmeier investigates our capacity for wonder ... and the result is exacting and perfectly strange' (For THINGS THAT FALL FROM THE SKY) (The New Yorker )
'Sure-to-be-acclaimed fiction mixes with travelogue ... Gripping - and moving - stuff.'
(Sunday Times Travel Magazine - February 2006 )
'A spellbinding novel'
(Amy Worth, lead account manager, books, Amazon; Bookseller/ February Booksellers' choice )
'His confident voice, observational brilliance and playful humour dazzle to the end.'
(The Times )
'Imagery like this abounds so that reading Brockmeier's prose is like eating a plate full of tasty titbits. You are bound to be delighted over and over again...it's entertaining and pleasurable to read.'
(Canberra Times )
'Luminous'
(The Age )
The Brief History of the Dead is more magic realism than science fiction. Brockmeier brings to his book the inquisitive soul of a child. He is a master of the imaginative ponder. His prose is full of whimsy, word play and metaphysical musing. ... evocative and attentive...truly spellbinding.
(Weekend Australian )
'The themes...are united with wonderful delicacy . . . A prodigy of imagination, insight and overwhelming tenderness'
(Murrough O'Brien, The Independent )
'Interesting and intellectually daring'
(New Statesman )
'A genuine page turner'
(Derby Evening Telegraph )
'The inventiveness with which the author links (the worlds of the living and the dead) is highly impressive'
(Financial Times )
'Brockmeier is a lyrical yet subtle writer, interested in perplexing teleological questions . . . A powerful read'
(Time Out )
'Such is his sensitivity and skill that Brockmeier contrives a mystery that is nonetheless subtle, absorbing and ultimately satisfying.'
(Colin Greenland, Guardian )
'The Brief History of the Dead is altogether remarkable'
(Good Reading )
'An intriguing take on the afterlife and will encourage you to think about what death means to you'
(The Weekly Times )
'Sort of like Lost in a good book . . . Comparison with Alice Sebold's The Lovely Bones is inevitable'
(USA Today )
'Convincing . . . reflects on relationships in a beautiful, delicate manner'
(Publisher's Weekly )