âWith a perfectly tuned ear for registering emotional shade and recognizing the involuntary episodes of self-deception within our emotional and psychological landscapes, Geltinger manages to tell a tale that would not have itself be told. That is something that only great literature can do.â
Die Zeit
âGeltingerâs second novel traces a lavishly descriptive path through the titular landscapeâfinely rendered in Boothâs translation. . . . Lush imagery abounds, with gorgeous depictions of the northern German countryside.â
Publishers Weekly
âCombining the forceful quality of the second-person narrative with a restless experimentation with language, German writer Gunther Geltinger mesmerizes with <i>Moor</i>. This aching story of a speech-challenged boy and his desire to connect with those who should love him unconditionally will haunt the reader long after the final sumptuous description of the bookâs eerie physical and emotional terrain has faded.â
World Literature Today