"A startling, discomfiting work, written in razor-sharp prose. J.M. Coetzee's work comes to mind, as does Michael Haneke's, but there's a sweet coldness here that is all Kitamura's. This is her second novel, a brilliant book early in what will surely be a major career."--Teju Cole "Financial Times, "Best Books of 2012" "
"I have been in a daze ever since I finished this book.
Gone to the Forest is superb. It is so beautifully written, so balanced - there isn't a spare sentence or word in the whole thing. Utterly distinctive, it is almost allegorical in its force. Kitamura is of the best living writers I've read, and she gives the dead ones a run for their money."--Evie Wyld, author of After the Fire a Still Small Voice
"Gone to the Forest is a stark, urgent, beautiful novel. Katie Kitamura merges history and fable to create an explosive narrative about people trapped by terrible events they cannot control, but in which they are also deeply implicated. Its themes are ambitious--guilt and innocence, power and submission, meaning and nonsense. The characters and images of
Gone to the Forest continue to haunt me, a tribute to their lasting emotional power and their creator's extraordinary gifts."--Siri Hustvedt, author of The Summer Without Men
"Gone to the Forest is a mesmerizing novel, one whose force builds inexorably as its story unfolds in daring, unexpected strokes. Kitamura's prose brings to mind Cormac McCarthy or Jean Rhys, but the music of these lines is all her own--lyrical, sharp-edged, spare, and unafraid. Be warned: you'll find yourself reading long past midnight, out of breath and wide awake. This is a bold and powerful book."
--Julie Orringer, author of The Invisible Bridge
"The death-throes of a colonial world captured in dark, obsessive prose, punctuated by images of strange, surreal beauty: the falling ash, the river of dead fish. One thinks at times of both Coetzee and Gordimer, but Kitamura is very much her own writer, and makes you feel keenly the tragedy of her three lost souls."
-- Salman Rushdieon
Gone to the Forest "A watchful and magnificent work. From the first page, Kitamura is in complete control, both of the prose and of the story it carries. She is a skilled hunter and we are her helpless prey."--Teju Cole, author of Open City
"Katie Kitamura is a major talent. It is not often I read a book of controlled, illuminating, prose and it is even more rare that the story therein survives the style. I was reminded of the writings of Herta Müller and J.M. Coetzee, both important storytellers of our time and vanguards of form. Kitamura's spare, elegant and affecting work in
Gone to the Forest brings the reader in and out of the nexus of three souls caught in a nameless land, in a nameless time, and gently observes as they try to give name to their relation to one another, to the land, to the times and to themselves.
Gone to the Forest is a book of atmospheres and moods, details and desires and Kitamura handles the nuances with the grace and confidence of a writer beyond her years."--Laleh Khadivi, author of The Age of Orphans
"What Kitamura summons brilliantly is the sensation of a repressed and repressive society laid bare - erotically, psychologically and politically. She writes with equal authority about the weight of a man's gaze on a disrobing woman and the sensation of being exposed by history's glare ... Gone to the Forest confirms Kitamura's prodigious talent."--The New York Times Book Review
"Hypnotic prose [with] flashes of unexpected beauty... so spare as to almost be incantatory... It marvelously suggests the chaotic, contradictory and highly changeable way the mind works....
Gone to the Forest, in just 200 pages, floats, unfolds and astonishes."
-- Marie Myung-Ok Lee,
San Francisco Chronicle on
Gone to the Forest "Kitamura offers echoes of J. M. Coetzee's
Disgrace, coolly chronicling the family's undoing as it tracks against the politicalturmoil ripping through the nation."
--
New York Times on
Gone to the Forest "A ruthless, controlled style distinguishes this novel about a man and his oppressive father in an unnamed colonial country that's about to blow... [Kitamura's] style reminds one of Marguerite Duras and Herta Müller--writers who have had to reckon with power in the colonial Indochina and the repressive Romania, respectively. Power is the subject, and the execution is precise."--The Daily Beast
"In this wondrous tale of both a family and a country's dissolution, Kitamura brings readers into an unspecified time in an unnamed colonial country ... Kitamura, with spare, mesmerizing prose, paints a memorable vision of emotional chaos echoed by geologic and political turmoil."
--
Publishers Weekly, (starred review) on
Gone to the Forest "[Kitamura's] unidentified place and time, and the actions and motivations of these three human cyphers, ensure that readers will be pondering
Gone to the Forest long after they finish that final sentence."--Booklist
"With spare and deliberateprose, Kitamura brings this fable of power's illusions to a stunning, breathtaking conclusion. Along the way ... she shows why she has earnedcomparison to great writers like Nadine Gordimer and Herta Müller.
Gone tothe Forest is a beautiful, indelibledepiction of the horror of primal impulses."--Shelf Awareness