- Published: 1 July 2010
- ISBN: 9781407052472
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
The Hare With Amber Eyes
The #1 Sunday Times Bestseller
- Published: 1 July 2010
- ISBN: 9781407052472
- Imprint: Vintage Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 368
...a self-questioning, witty, sharply perceptive book, shaped as a series of journeys... by writing objects into his family history he has achieved something remarkable.
Tanya Harrod, TLS
[de Waal) weaves together with great delicacy various strands of the lives of a glamorous dynasty
Gerald Jacobs, The Telegraph
The Hare with Amber Eyes beautifully evokes the rise and fall of a Jewish baning family, from 19th-century Russia to fin de siècle Paris and Vienna, and their dispersal during the Nazi years.
David Herman, New Statesman, Christmas round up
A beautiful and touching story delivered in prose as spare and well judged as a line of De Waal's own porcelain pots.
Richard Ingleby, Art Newspaper, Christmas round up
A beautiful piece of writing, mixing family memoir, cultural history, travel narrative and nuanced observation of miniature curiosities.
Jonathan Bates, Times Literary Supplement, Christmas round up
A book of astonishing originality
Artemis Cooper, Evening Standard, Christmas round up
A book that combines the charm of a personal memoir with the resonance of world history.
Rosemary Hill, The Scotsman
A brilliantly constructed picture of vanished worlds
Antonia Fraser, Mail on Sunday, Christmas round up
A magical study of how objects get handled, used and handed on
Economist, Christmas round up
A short lingering memoir by one of Britain's leading potters.
Juliet Gardiner, Daily Telegraph, Christmas round up
An exquisitely described search for a lost family and a lost time. From the moment you open the book you are in an old Europe fully re-created.
Colm Toibin, Irish Times, Christmas round up
An extraordinary and touching journey with a backdrop glittering with images from Proute and Zola and Klimt.
Margaret Drabble, Times Literary Supplement, Christmas round up
An intensely personal meditation on art, history and family, told in prose as elegant and precise as the netsuke themselves.
London Review of Books
An intensely personal meditation on art, history and family, told in prose as elegant and precise as the netsuke themselves
London Review of Books
Both the story he uncovers and the objects he describes are fascinating and startling.
AS Byatt, Financial Times, Christmas round up
Edmund de Waal's memoir-cum-cultural enquiry, chosen by several of our contributors, and described by one as the "book not only of the year, but of the decade"
Times Literary Supplement
Elegant. Modest. Tragic. Homeric.
Stephen Frears, Guardian, Christmas round up
Every page of Edmund de Waal's The Hare with Amber Eyes gave me pleasure.
Rachel Polonsky, Times Literary Supplement, Christmas round up
Few writers have ever brought more perception, wonder and dignity to a family story as has Edmund de Waal in a narrative that beguiles from the opening sentence
Eileen Battersby, Irish Times
From a hard and vast archival mass...Mr de Waal has fashioned, stroke by minuscule stroke, a book as fresh with detail as if it had been written from life, and as full of beauty and whimsy as a netsuke from the hands of a master carver.
The Economist
Gently erudite and personable memoir.
Emma Hagestadt
Gripping and surprising
AS Byatt, Times Literary Supplement, Christmas round up
His delightful memoir on the cross-continental travelsof this collection is suffused with absolute conviction in art's central place in life.
Jackie Wullschlager, Financial Times, Christmas round up
I also enjoyed The Hare with Amber Eyes for the quality of the writing and the evocation of a Europe that was destroyed
Colm Toibin, Daily Telegraph, Christmas round up
I don't know how this memoir can be surpassed. The writing is simple and powerful, the craftsman in Mr de Waal (a potter) warms to the beauty of the netsuke
Leslie Geddes-Brown, Country Life
I know of no more effective description of the accumulated meanings, the symbolic freight, of ownership
Charles Saumarez-Smith, Art Newspaper, Christmas round up
I was moved and excited by Edmund de Waal's The Hare with Amber Eyes.
AS Byatt, Guardian, Christmas round up
intensely mannered in style... a remarkable narrative
Max Hastings, Guardian, Christmas round up
It is a rich tale of the pleasure and pains of what it is to be human.
Bettany Hughes, Daily Telegraph, Christmas round up
It is not often that a family saga leaves readers panting for the new ceramics galleries at the V&A.
Flora Fraser, Evening Standard, Christmas round up
It's the most beautiful book I've read this year
Daily Telegraph, Tracey Chevalier
Made the hunt for a collection of rare netsuke the spine of a far-reaching family history that melds the pursuit of beautiful art with the flight from atrocious history.
Boyd Tonkin, Independent, Christmas round up
Objects have always been... stolen, retrieved and lost. It is how you tell their story that really matters." He has told their story wonderfully. Oh, and this is a beautiful and unusual book, as a physical object. Someone really cared.
Veronica Horwell, Guardian
One of the most impressive history books this year.... An intense journey through the heartache of political and racial upheaval in 19th and 20th-century Europe
Bettany Hughes, BBC History Magazine, Christmas round up
Part treasure hunt, part family saga, Edmund de Waal's richly original memoir spans nearly two centuries and covers half the world
Evening Standard
Part treasure hunt, part family saga, this is the haunting story of a unique collection of Japanese figurines.
Sebastian Shakespeare, Tatler, Christmas round up
Short, lyrical and intensely moving.
Miranda Seymour, Daily Telegraph, Christmas round up
Showed that what counts in a memoir is not experience alone, but intelligence and an ability to write
Philip Hensher, Spectator, Christmas round up
The best book of the year was The Hare with Amber Eyes by Edmund de Waal... The extraordinary history of these tiny objects encompasses many changes of habitat. This is a memorable account, written with exemplary modesty.
Anita Brookner, Spectator, Christmas round up
The book not only of the year, but of the decade... a quite enchanting book, to be kept and rearead by as many generations as it describes.
Michael Howard, Times Literary Supplement, Christmas round up
The miracle of this book is that, by the end, we do learn the itinerant life of this collection. How did the netsuke escape the Gestapo? How did they return to the family and move to Tokyo? The answers, like much in this book, are incredible
Frances Spalding, The Independent
The most brilliant book I've read for years. Part memoir, part-history, it traces a collection of beautiful Japanese netsukes left to the author
Bettany Hughes, Sunday Herald, Christmas round up
The most exquisite and intriguing memoir of the year
Robert Collins, Sunday Times, Christmas round up
The story he tells is as exquisitely rendered as the netsuke themselves
Claire Allfree, Metro
There are many remarkable insights in The Hare with Amber Eyes, not least de Waal's nuanced account of the eroticized nature of French Japonisme. But a central haunting theme is European anti-Semitism, and its end-game.
Tanya Harrod, TLS
There was no supper during the week I could not stop reading it, then for weeks afterwards I could talk of nothing else. It was simply enchanting
Cressida Connolly, Spectator, Christmas round up
This book (is) every bit as exquisite as the diminutive sculptures that inspired it
Daragh Reddin, Metro
This is a highly unusual and thought-provoking book... reading it is a window on a fresh way of looking at the world
Daisy Leitch, The Lady
This remarkable book... a meditation on touch, exile, space and the responsibility of inheritance... like the netsuke themselves, this book is impossible to put down. you have in your hands a masterpiece.
Frances Wilson, The Sunday Times
Unexpectedly combines a micro craft-form with macro history to great effect.
Julian Barnes, Guardian, Christmas round up
Unputdownable, exquisitely crafted family memoir about the fortuned of a collection of Japanese figurines
The Sunday Times Summer Reading
Unputdownable, exquisitely crafted memoir
Sunday Times, Summer Reading