The Memory Police is a masterpiece: a deep pool that can be experienced as fable or allegory, warning and illumination. It is a novel that makes us see differently, opening up its ideas in inconspicuous ways, knowing that all moments of understanding and grace are fleeting. It is political and human, it makes no promises. It is a rare work of patient and courageous vision -- Madeleine Thien * Guardian * It's an age since I read a book as strange, beautiful and affecting this haunting work reaches beyondto examine what it is to be human a remarkable writer * Sunday Times * Masterly...Like Colson Whitehead's Underground Railroad and Mohsin Hamid's Exit West, Yoko Ogawa's novel transforms a familiar metaphor into imaginative truth. -- Jia Tolentino * The New Yorker * In a feat of dark imagination, Yoko Ogawa stages an intimate, suspenseful drama of courage and endurance while conjuring up a world that is at once recognizable and profoundly strange * Wall Street Journal * Explores questions of power, trauma and state surveillance...particularly resonant now, at a time of rising authoritarianism across the globe. * New York Times, pick of the month * The fresh take on 1984 you didn't know you needed. * Washington Post * This is a work of immense precision that is drawing on allegory, that is drawing on myth, that is drawing on dystopia and is doing that deftly. It is the work of a Japanese master who transcends her cultural context to speak to us on a level that is universal. The acclaimed Japanese writers fifth English release is an elegantly spare dystopian fable...Reading The Memory Police is like sinking into a snowdrift: lulling yet suspenseful, it tingles with dread and incipient numbness. * New York Times Book Review * Ogawa exploits the psychological complexity of[ a] bizarre situation to impressive effect her achievement is to weave in a far more personal sense of the destruction and distortion of the psyche * Observer * One of Japans most acclaimed authors explores truth, state surveillance and individual autonomy. Ogawas fable echoes the themes of George Orwells 1984, Ray Bradburys Fahrenheit 451, and Gabriel Garcia Marquezs 100 Years of Solitude, but it has a voice and power all its own. * TIME Magazine, Best Books of Summer 2019 *