One of the great non-fiction writers of this and the last century... The story twists and turns back on Jacobs: the boyish humanity and exuberance; his wide-eyed openness to wonder; his altogether un-English rush of enthusiasm - is all on show... An exceptionally gifted writer
- Simon Schama, Financial Times
Jacobs was [...] insatiably curious, always warm but never unctuous, his voracious erudition in art and history employed as a key but never a cudgel... [An] entrancing memoir
- Boyd Tonkin, Independent
In a beguiling blend of art history, memoir and travel writing, the late art historian delves into the mysteries of Las Meninas - and there is more to it than meets the eye... [A] personal and passionate manifesto... Fascinating
- Caroline Sanderson, ‘Editor’s Choice’, Bookseller
His gift of cheerful observation, combined with profound intellectual interpretation, is compelling... Helped along by Vulliamy's affectionate (and extremely learned) commentary, the book gradually resolves itself into the quest the subtitle suggests... A delight
- Jan Morris, Literary Review
Open-ended [and] full of curiosity, which rather fits its subject
- James McConnachie, Sunday Times
Jacobs writes from close up, as he would look at a painting, with openness, curiosity and passion
- Marion Coutts,
An interesting discourse on Velazquez's marvellous painting and a fitting tribute to a compelling author.... [The] enormous discipline and dedication and the vivid lucidity that characterized [Jacobs'] writing is very apparent even in this incomplete text... a pleasure to read
- Charles Robertson, History Today
A heart-rending personal quest to piece together a painting that touches Jacobs, but ultimately eludes his grasp, as it does all of us. That it will remain unfathomable is surely by the Old Master's design, although all the enjoyably circuitous roads that the author takes away from the work itself - into London academic life and the travails of contemporary Spain - eventually lead back, almost comically, to Las Meninas and to Michael. Perhaps my connection to his text is not just cultural or coincidental but universal, that what I relate to is his clear understanding of how works of art reach out to us all, if not equally then differently and profoundly, across barriers of time and place
- Ossian Ward,
[A] clear-eyed look at Velázquez's masterpiece by one of our most animated and engaging writers on art... part travelogue and part autobiography, sadly interrupted but curated with much flair and affection by Ed Vulliamy, whose poignant coda is a tribute to friendship and shared passions. How uplifting to know that, right to the end, Michael Jacobs was still eagerly chronicling - with the same combination of droll scepticism and enthusiastic wonder - the many lands, both geographical and intellectual, through which he passed
- Ross King,
Every book by Michael Jacobs combines adventure, autobiography and scholarship in a unique blend of warmth, humour and vivid prose. The wide-ranging story of the quest for Velázquez's Las Meninas, from Michael's school days to a contemporary crisis-ridden Madrid, is a perfect example. Sadly, this aptly titled last work is a bittersweet reminder that an untimely death has robbed us of the irreplaceable and irrepressible Michael Jacobs
- Paul Preston,
Anovel and highly beguiling fusion of art history, autobiography and observation of contemporary Spain
- Martin Gayford,
Brave and poignant
- Michael Prodger, New Statesman
Open-minded, fragmentary and full of curiosity
Oldie
[Everything is Happening] will be read with pleasure by anyone who has enjoyed Jacobs's travel writing or who has any interest in Spain and the Spanish.
- 20 best books on Spain, Daily Telegraph
This book is both a memoir and a quixotic travelogue as much as an art-historical study... If he had finished it Everything is Happening would have been the culmination of his writing career. As it stands, it is open-ended, fragmentary and full of curiosity, which rather fits its subject.
- James McConachie, Sunday Times
Everything is Happening is a mosaic of impression adding up to a picture which can almost be glimpsed. The painting's enigma is at the heart of its brilliance, and however long Jacobs had lived this would always have been a book without an ending.
- Alistair Mabbott, Sunday Herald