Thrillingly addictive, magnificent, luxurious . . . as staggering and absorbing as a great 19th-century novel -- Catherine Taylor * Telegraph * Spellbinding, exquisite . . . Morante creates something truly modern: a novel about the power of stories and storytelling, both seductive and corrupting . . . every bit as exhilarating to read now as it must have been radical to encounter nearly 80 years ago -- Lucy Scholes * Financial Times * A triumph: a fairy tale of epic proportions and a rightly rediscovered 20th-century classic -- Francesca Peacock * Spectator * What a thrill that this wild, evocative, compelling novel is at long last fully available in English. Its vivid depictions of how class both imprisons and distorts a persons sense of self is powerful . . . Lies and Sorcery is a fairy tale with no need for fairies or magic * New Statesman * I absolutely love this book. Every page is filled with life, and a life, notwithstanding its pain and longing, that reassures, because its done with such attentiveness, intelligence and care, and an ability to perceive and receive so much, and then with seeming effortlessness is reproduced on the page. This is why Morante is one of the most talented writers of the 20th century -- Hisham Matar, author of The Return I loved it and it had been a long time since I had read anything that gave me such life and joy... It was an extraordinary adventure for me to discover, among those chapter titles that felt so nineteenth-century, that the novel was actually describing our own time and place, our own daily existence with lacerating and painful intensity -- Natalia Ginzburg [ In Lies and Sorcery] I discovered that an entirely female storyentirely womens desires and ideas and feelingscould be compelling and, at the same time, have great literary value -- Elena Ferrante Each plot development is surrounded by acres of commentary whose richness and intensity deep, dense, psychologically penetrating provides the story with transformative values, converts melodrama into metaphor * The New York Times * [ Lies and Sorcery] is a work of wild abundance and inexhaustible psychological depth....[ it] evokes the passage from a traditional society steeped in the values of collectiveness and belonging to one obsessed with power, with the idea that an individual need only impose their will to have what they want....Elsa Morantes is, undeniably, a grim vision of the world; yet to read Lies and Sorcery in this heroic new translation by Jenny McPhee, always admirably attentive to the originals delicate balance between archaism and fluency, is exhilarating throughout -- Tim Parks * TLS * An electrifying new translation ...a melodramatic saga of social climbing and doomed romance . . . despite its nineteenth-century veneer, Lies and Sorcery could have only been written in the twentieth century -- Jess Bergman * New Yorker *