A eulogy for the old Europe, the Europe both in and out of time, the Europe now lost in the folds of the map, <i>On the Road to Babadag</i> is valuable reading for UK readers. If we can't read our way around Europe, how will we ever find our place, our identity, within it?
Guardian
This book has a peculiar charm and power
Literary Review
Stasiuk's journeys are vivid poetry... What formally also underpins Stasiuk's travels, and rather beautifully embodies his resistance to the future, is how his prose communicates the working of memory, mirroring its inconsequentiality. His accounts are fragmented, shuffled, continued later or not. Time breaks down as it is past; in his mind events cover space and time in an even, translucent layer
- Julian Evans, Prospect
The emptiness, the disconnectedness and the stasis deep inside Europe can be as emotionally transfixing and revelatory as the tumult of a city crowd on the Indian subcontinent. There are still places that insist the human condition is timeless... His eye is keen and his commentary as rich as they are throughout... The burgundy passports of Europe have spread across the region since this book first appeared in 2004. Time is on the march after all, and now English readers can enjoy the rewards of Stasiuk's entrancing attempt to stand in the way of progress. It's an exceptional writer who can rise to such an impossible challenge
Independent
A Kerouac-style amble from the Baltic to the Adriatic
International Herald Tribune