Sigrid Nunez is the New York Times bestselling author of The Friend, winner of the 2018 National Book Award, and of seven other novels, including Salvation City, The Last of Her Kind, and What Are You Going Through. She is also the author of Sempre Susan: A Memoir of Susan Sontag. Her books have been translated into over thirty languages.
Once you discover Sigrid Nunez, you don't look back
*Anne Enright*
A sharp-eyed and tender novel about human connection in a time of
crisis. As compassionate as it is disquieting, and as funny as it
is painfully honest
*Paula Hawkins*
Beautiful and profound
*Meg Mason, author of Sorrow and Bliss*
I am committed, until one of us dies, to Nunez's novels. I find
them ideal. They are short, wise, provocative, funny - good and
strong company
*Dwight Garner, New York Times*
Sigrid Nunez has a talent for slim, companionable novels that have
both delicacy and power
*Vogue*
Powerful prose and insights into human connection make it
compulsively readable
*Elle*
A gorgeous, funny novel about connection in the face of the
pandemic
*iPaper*
[The Vulnerables] leaves us, as the novel reaches its
extraordinarily hopeful and disarming last line, with the feeling
that we have been helped
*Guardian*
With the intimacy and humour of a great conversation, this novel
makes you feel smarter and more alive
*People Magazine*
The chic new hardback to have on your New Year reading pile . . .
[Nunez is] a literary star
*The Independent*
Layered and thoughtful ... it's plainly written, but has beautiful
depths
*Daily Telegraph, The 75 Hottest Books of 2024 So Far*
A breath of fresh air for a time when it still sometimes feels like
there isn't any
*Good Housekeeping*
Elegiac, tartly funny . . . To read it is to feel in intimate
conversation with its narrator
*Daily Telegraph*
Infused with moments of hilarity and wisdom. Beautiful
*Woman's Weekly*
Nunez gracefully leaps from big emotions, including grief, to
erudite literary digressions or biting wit
*Wall Street Journal*
The Vulnerables is full of alive, curious poetry on the chaotic
times we live in
*Sheena Patel, author of I'm a Fan*
Smart and sad and funny
*Sarah Moss*
The elegant writing makes it a compelling read. I'm a huge fan
*Good Housekeeping (UK)*
A funny, divinely chatty novel filled with moments of the sublime.
I really think there are sections of this book that I'll be
thinking about forever
*Caroline O'Donoghue*
It is exciting to read a book that manages to be so honest and
serious, and at the same time so playful and witty
*Natasha Walter*
Sigrid Nunez is among the most interesting writers of our
generation ... Nunez is both as cold as ice about ageing (the old
are "bleached and bent and shrivelled") and funny ("you reach a
certain age, and it all kicks in: Social Security, Medicare and a
fondness for hydrangeas") and constantly surprises you with her
references (Larry David, Lily Tomlin) as well as her anecdotes
(it's tough to forget the startling image of a young woman with an
eating disorder who kills her appetite by coating her tongue with
Tiger Balm)
*Independent*
It's fresh, it's funny and it's very now. It has humour and honesty
in spades, both wielded in self-defence against a world that feels
off-kilter and almost absurd in its terribleness, from the gig
economy to the Trump 'phenomenon', from creative frustration to
urban burnout. I love Sigrid's clarity and quick expression, along
with her quirky range of interests, her economy and lightness of
touch
*Bidisha*
Nunez's rare ability to be at once wistfully elegiac and sharply
hilarious make The Vulnerables a gift
*Boston Globe*
Sigrid Nunez is a beautiful storyteller: there's beauty, depth,
lightness and whimsy in her writing. But what I most admired was
her confidence to be playful and inventive. The Vulnerables is
clever, refreshing and fulfilling to read
*Claire Kohda, author of Woman, Eating*
Grounded in an unexpected friendship between an abandoned bird and
a lonely, older novelist, The Vulnerables finds new ways to expound
on themes of community, companionship, and finding hope in
seemingly hopeless situations
*Harper's Bazaar, Best Books of 2023*
Sigrid Nunez is the godmother of contemplating empathy and
connection ...A novel that cracks open windows and offers a
reassuring breeze, reminding us that it's OK - and perhaps even
necessary - to need each other; it's only human
*San Francisco Chronicle*
What Nunez is trying to do instead is find meaning, to understand.
What this feels like is an eventful, rich, addictive conversation
with your smartest, funniest and most well-read friend. Except,
Nunez says, the conversation takes on new dimensions and new
textures when it's written down
*Los Angeles Times*
Hilarious and deeply reflective
*Time*
Nunez's writing seems always to be just what I need. The
Vulnerables is a gorgeous book on ageing and regret and, as is
often the case, on writing. Nunez is always posing controversial
questions or ideas and leaving the reader to make up their mind. I
loved it
*Ayisha Malik*
Nunez has a wry compassion, and an eye for the kind of detail only
grown-ups can catch. The books feel lived-in rather than
hard-earned, the voice is smart and kind
*Anne Enright, The Times*
Above all, this is a touching, beautiful book, which underlines
everyone's vulnerability to all manner of challenges facing the
world, not least how to co-exist even with those you would rather
discard as weeds
*The i*
Nunez is a master at writing vivid characters in ordinary
situations and bringing them to life, making every page fly by. And
The Vulnerables is no different - it's a poignant and deft
portrayal of humanity in a time when nothing felt normal
*Shondaland*
Sigrid Nunez is on a roll. She's tapped into a smart, wry voice
which feels right for our times, as do her concerns with
friendship, empathy, loss, and loneliness
*NPR*
Nunez's voice is unflinching and intimate
*Entertainment Weekly*
One of my favourite authors
*Natalie Portman*
Nunez's prose itself comforts us. Her confident and direct style
uplifts-the music in her sentences, her deep and varied
intelligence. She addresses important ideas unpretentiously and
offers wisdom for any aspiring writer
*New York Times Book Review*
Long live Sigrid Nunez
*Laura Marling*
What's consistent across Nunez's books is their searching tone
about the biggest of life's questions
*Washington Post*
Spare and understated and often quite funny, the experience is less
like reading fiction than like eavesdropping on someone else's
brain . . . despite the grimness of the setting, the novel itself
is strangely, sweetly hopeful; there is, it seems, a reason to go
on. Sharp-and surprisingly tender.
*Kirkus, STARRED REVIEW*
Funny and thoughtful ... Nunez manages to make a story of mortality
go down easy
*Publishers Weekly*
All kinds of vulnerability are laced through this layered,
thoughtful book . . . The states of feeling she conjures are
quietly shocking, reminders of the pleasures and costs of our
shared humanity'
*Telegraph*
If cheerful pessimism is a thing, then Sigrid Nunez might be a
leading ambassador
*Irish Times*
Laced with humour and wit, this is a powerful portrayal of how,
through connection with others, we can remain vibrant in a
soul-less world
*The Lady*
[A] wry, thought-provoking novel
*Daily Mail*
The Vulnerables is sharply observed, crisply honest, and funny
*Country and Town House Magazine*
In many ways, then, this is a covid diary, and while Nunez captures
the strangeness of that time, she is too good a writer for it to
stop there, with musings on friendship, connection, writing, grief
and the many vulnerabilities that are part and parcel of being
alive
*Marie Claire*
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