<b>Charlotte Higgins's <i>Red Thread</i> is a masterwork</b>, an open-eyed analysis of the everyday mazery we face without even realising it, and an understanding of psychic and narrative architecture that's a pretty crucial piece of equipment for wherever and whenever we find ourselves lost. I read it on the balcony of a hotel in Rome... and it was as if the city itself opened playfully and thoughtfully around the reading experience in its amalgam of pasts and presents, histories and mysteries.
<b>Any bookshelf would be graced by the presence of </b>[<i><b>Red Thread</b></i>]… [it] ask[s] readers to <b>surrender to the unpredictable pleasures of getting lost</b>… playful and <b>gorgeously written</b>.
- Robert Douglas-Fairhurst, Guardian
A serious, substantial, scholarly and yet also highly personal book about mazes… <b><i>Red Thread</i> is a book to admire as much as to enjoy.</b>
- Ian Sansom, Spectator
[<b>Charlotte Higgins</b>] <b>is</b> <b>no ordinary author</b>. Her <b>thrillingly original</b> book – it really is like no other – is itself a sort of maze of facts and thoughts, ancient tales and modern phenomena… <b>on every page there is a sparkling idea</b> <b>or a fascinating piece of information</b>. It is also <b>beautifully written</b>… <b>a beautifully produced volume</b>, full of colour illustrations of sculptures and paintings and <b>tantalising</b> maps of mazes.
- Craig Brown, Mail on Sunday
In this <b>beautifully produced and richly illustrated</b> book… Charlotte Higgins takes us on <b>a fascinating meander</b> through the art and literature of the last 2,500 years… <b>After reading this book you will see labyrinths everywhere.</b>
- Michael O’Loughlin, Irish Times