About the Author:
Nina Allan is a novelist and short story writer. Her previous fiction has won several prizes, including the British Science Fiction Award for Best Novel, the Novella Award and the Grand Prix de L'Imaginaire for Best Translated Work. She lives and works in Rothesay, on the Isle of Bute. The Dollmaker is her third novel.
Review:
“Beautifully written and deeply strange.” —The Times (UK)
“[Allan’s] literary sensibility fuses the fantastic and the mundane to great effect.” —The Guardian
“Exquisitely dark...the novel’s unusual structure and compelling characters weave a hypnotic plot.” —Booklist (starred review)
“This uncanny novel of longed-for connection is worth the effort.” —Publishers Weekly
“Exquisite...Whether read as a romance, a fairy tale, a lament, or combinations of the three: The Dollmaker is a bewitching story.” —Foreword Reviews (starred review)
“The rich imagery, sentence construction, and deft storytelling lend the novel charm and readability.” —Kirkus Reviews
“[An] unsettling, intricately constructed, and teasingly elliptical tale of misfits, outcasts, and outsiders...[Allan’s] talents are evident.” —Daily Mail
“With distinctly Gothic overtones and a creepy Nabokovian narrator...[The Dollmaker moves] toward fabulation, horror, and even dystopian SF...The stories themselves are worth the price of admission, disturbing non-fairy tales that occupy a territory somewhere between Angela Carter and the more mordant side of Daphne du Maurier...The Dollmaker is a novel that recedes deeper into its own hall of mirrors as you read it, and it’s compelling in the same way: you want to find your way out of these reflections, but you want to savor them as well.” —Locus
“A uniquely beautiful read.” —Image Magazine
“Macabre and spine-chilling...The Dollmaker is atmospherically dark and Allan has written a timeless tale.” —Sunday Times (South Africa)
“In clean, beautiful, agile prose, Nina Allan is able to conjure a recognizable England and a place of deep enchantment. The world of The Dollmaker is not only one we know, it seems to know us, and readers will lose and find themselves inside Allan’s wonderful creation. A fantastic book, revealing a zone of wonder and a world of truth.” —Andrew O’Hagan, author of The Illuminations
“Amazing experiments are still possible with the form of the novel! I was deeply impressed by the complexity of this elegant, beautiful and subtly scary book.” —Daniel Kehlmann, author of Measuring the World
“Mesmerizing, richly layered and wholly original—worthy of a modern Grimm.” —Andrew Caldecott, author of Rotherweird
“As uncanny and disquieting as a Hans Bellmer photograph, yet rooted—like all of Nina Allan’s superb novels—in a minutely observed everyday reality that feels almost too familiar. This is a masterful and multi-layered haunted toyshop of a novel, but who exactly is playing with who?” —Tony White, author of The Fountain in the Forest
“A beautifully uncanny tale in which each moment chimes against every other, doubles abounding, until you—along with the characters—are not sure where flesh becomes doll and vice versa. A haunting meditation on the relation of art to life that will leave you quietly unsettled, and better for it.” —Brian Evenson, author of Song for the Unraveling of the World
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