'Writers approaching 90 aren't supposed to write with vigour or experiment with form. But Lessing has never done the expected thing and "Alfred & Emily" is one more exception in an exceptional career.' The Guardian
'Powerful...a page-turning narrative...a remarkable achievement...he very structure of Alfred & Emily brilliantly interrogates the shadow of empire and war – the contrast between what actually happened, and what might have been.' The Independent
'Triumphant...heartbreaking....in this extraordinary valediction, she challenges the impossibility of escaping what we were born with.' Scotland on Sunday
'Simply the book that Lessing, 90 next year, was compelled to write next...in Alfred & Emily Lessing has found her way to an old and difficult truth. People are what they are, but what they are is also, at least in part, what they might have been.' Daily Telegraph
'Has the freshness, clarity and emotional acuity that made her first novel “The Grass is Singing” so outstanding...a tribute to a remakrable childhood, and a poignant memoir of the mother whose greatest legacy to her daughter was an invaluable gift for storytelling.' Literary Review
'One of the strangest books you will ever read.' Mail on Sunday
'This tale has a quality at once dreamy and wooden, like beautifully carved wooden dolls...vividly and urgently written...makes us think...about the moral and emotional power of different ways of telling a story.' Financial Times
'Vivid, turbulent, raw with emotion.' Sunday Telegraph
'Quietly extraordinary...this perfectly crafted book is, as Lessing knows, the latest instalment of a remarkable payback.' The Observer
'This tale has a quality at once dreamy and wooden, like beautifully carved wooden dolls...vividly and urgently written....makes us think...about the moral and emotional power of different ways of telling a story.' Financial Times
'Lessing's vivid, ambivalent memories of what is now Zimbabwe are fascinating.' Evening Standard
'Engaging, sympathetic and wise...offers a vivid and often charming picture of Lessing's childhood on a farm in Southern Rhodesia...he memoir is a gem, full of keen observation, vivid memories comment and reflections...read it yourself; you will find it very rewarding; a delight also.' The Scotsman
'Powerful...it is fascinating to see (Lessing) focus so sharply in her new book on what must be for us all, the most intimate of personal narratives: our parents' lives, what they were, or might have been.' The Times
'Intriguing...the first part...has many fascinating features...the second part...burns into vivd being as it re-examines Lessing's African childhood.' Sunday Times
'Vivid, turbulent, raw with emotion.' Sunday Telegraph
Praise for Doris Lessing:
‘She’s up there in the pantheon with Balzac and George Eliot. We’re lucky she’s still writing.’ Lisa Appignanesi, Independent
‘She has an extraordinary feeling for the peculiar vulnerabilities of the young and the elderly. And her portraits of human relationships are of quite staggering beauty.’ Ruth Scurr, The Times
‘Doris Lessing has changed the way we think about the world.’ Blake Morrison
Praise for ‘The Story of General Dann and Mara’s Daughter, Griot and the Snow Dog’:
'Lessing pierces the heart with the half quotations that Dann's scribes scribble down as the books fall to dust in their hands ... Lessing has much wisdom to impart although she is astute enough not to preach but to pose some unsettling questions.' Maggie Gee, Sunday Times