Highsmith probes to the very core of her heroine with a <b>controlled ferocity and single-mindedness that illuminates every page of her novel</b>. It is a masterly book, a haunting book, a book that lingers long in the memory and constantly disturbs and delights
The Times
<i>Edith's Diary</i> is certainly one of the saddest novels I ever read, but it is also one of the mere twenty or so that I would say were<b> perfect, unimprovable masterpieces</b>
- A. N. Wilson, Telegraph
As original, as funny, as cleverly written and as moving as any novel I have read since I started reviewing
- Auberon Waugh, Evening Standard
Edith's fall takes the form of a psychological chiller, but there is also something larger, the poignancy of her struggle not to go under. She is betrayed by such ordinary dreams
- New York Times,
A work of extraordinary force and feeling . . .<b> her strongest, her most imaginative</b> and by far her most substantial novel
New Yorker
Moral speculations surface about the respective responsibilities of the uncaring and the unloved, tenterhooks cushioned with an <b>enveloping intimacy of character and place</b>
Kirkus Reviews
Highsmith's novels are peerlessly disturbing ....bad dreams that keep us thrashing for the rest of the night
The New Yorker
Edith's fall takes the form of a psychological chiller, but there is also something larger, the poignancy of her struggle not to go under. She is betrayed by such ordinary dreams
New York Times
Highsmith probes to the very core of her heroine with a controlled ferocity and single-mindedness that illumines every page of her novel. It is a masterly book, a haunting book, a book that lingers long in the memory and constantly disturbs and delights.
- The Times, The Times
A work of extraordinary force and feeling . . . her strongest, her most imaginative and by far her most substantial novel
- New Yorker, New Yorker
As original, as funny, as cleverly written and as moving as any novel I have read since I started reviewing
- Auberon Waugh, The Evening Standard
<i>Edith's Diary</i> is certainly one of the saddest novels I ever read, but it is also one of the mere twenty or so that I would say were perfect, unimprovable masterpieces
- A.N Wilson, Daily Telegraph