Study for Obedience
Review: A weird outsider, a religious town - and one of the year's best novels... Beguiling and smart... Bernstein's prose has a studied coolness, all concision and steady flow. Yet it develops a queasiness of tone as the narrator's dealings with the townsfolk become a painful comedy... Haunting... * Daily Telegraph *
One of my favourite living writers... hypnotic... a complex and compelling book * GQ *
Study for Obedience [...] spins a carefully woven web of culpability and criminality... Bernstein paints from a palette of dread... This masterly follow-up to her debut acts as a meditation on survival, the dangers of absorbing the narratives of the powerful, and a warning that the self-blame of the oppressed often comes back to bite * Observer *
A story of abjection... This compelling book serves as a powerful castigation of those who would draw the lines of society and communal identity so as to narrow diversity and to punish those who dare to be different * Irish Times *
[A] short, potent outing... a deliberately enigmatic, sporadically deadpan offering with a fair whiff of Samuel Beckett. But it's at its most compelling as the folk horror evolves, seemingly, into opaque revenge drama * Daily Mail *
Remarkable... A beautiful, riddling tale, it's like nothing else you'll read this summer * Telegraph *
Study for Obedience is a fully absorbing, beautiful and sinister portrait of becoming and unbelonging, of violence held in time and place, that enriches the reader's habitation of the world's intelligibility and its darkness -- David Hayden
Sarah Bernstein manages to combine cool, perfectly weighted prose with an extraordinary emotional sensibility -- Fiona Mozley
Sarah Bernstein's Study for Obedience is at once a languid and sometimes harrowing journey into the truth of human animals living in a small community and the need for a woman to give voice to the strange and beautiful cruelties of life. This is a unique novel that is primal and eerie, where language creates silence and vivid images reflect a kind of earthiness where our most intimate selves live. The wide praise for Bernstein's remarkable writing is well earned. -- Asale Angel-Ajani, author of A Country You Can Leave