Brilliantly articulated and often piercingly sad, Dunn's characters find themselves caught up in what may today be termed quarter-life crises - they are unsettled, dissatisfied; prone to despair, to jealousy, to falling unsuitably in love, to deep, unnavigable loss...Dunn's new novel, <i>Levitation for Beginner</i>s, returns to the extreme psychological landscapes of these early works... This is a novel about everything and nothing, sour and melancholy, <b>with elements of sheer comedy and almost unbearable beaut</b>y... The older Deborah reflects that "I'm surprised any of us lived to tell the tale", and <b>if this subtle book has a message, it is how alien and yet how relatable the past remains</b>
Guardian, Book of the Day
<b>A glorious writer... witty, well-observed and full of heart</b>...This book is filled with humour, emanating chiefly from Deborah's asides and her mother's acerbic, short-and-sweet judgments of others. It's very, very funny but Dunn is not playing just for laughs. There is a profound authenticity to every word spoken, every cultural reference used and every slow piecing together of the true background story of Sarah-Jayne... This is <b>a wonderful, accessible story full of love, memory and the truth</b>
Irish Independent
<b>A bittersweet, nostalgia-tinged adventure</b>, saturated in contemporary pop culture, <b>with a steadily growing voltage from slow-build jeopardy and regular jolts of irony</b> in Deborah's hindered understanding of her life as a child
Daily Mail
<i>Levitation for Beginners</i> transported me right back to my '70s schooldays. The clannishness and micro-cruelties of 10-year-old girls were <b>brilliantly authentic</b>. <b>I especially liked the innuendo and half-grasped truths that filter down to Deborah from the adult world and the slowly building unease</b>. I loved that nothing was over-explained; it all made for <b>a deliciously unsettling read</b>
Clare Chambers, bestselling author of Small Pleasures
<b>Even if your childhood wasn't overshadowed by David Cassidy and Spacehoppers, this evocation of the lethal gossip and antipathies of a provincial primary school shaken by the arrival of a pretty, confident girl who isn't all that she would seem, is sure to stir dark memories.</b> <b>Lovely</b>
Patrick Gale
On the surface this is a quiet story about life in a small village in 1970s England (if you grew up in the 70s you'll be howling at the period details) but it's so much more than that. <b>I've always loved Suzannah's writing and the skilful way she creates such complexity in her characters and shows all the emotion and struggle going on beneath the surface.</b> It's what she does best, I think, and this novel is a masterclass in building quiet tension and atmosphere without BIG PLOT and melodrama. <b>A deceptively clever, unsettling and chilling read about the secrets and lies at the heart of a small community that feels incredibly, devastatingly true</b>
Katherine Clements
<b>Powerful and unsettling</b>, Dunn's distinctive voice and knack for observation transported me straight back to my teenage years and <b>had me gripped to the very end</b>
Carly Reagon
<p>If the past is a foreign country where they do things differently, then the Seventies is most certainly on the other side of the world. Whether you lived through that time or not, <i>Levitation for Beginners</i> is all about how it feels to be in that awkward age between childhood and adolescence, your 11+ and grammar school. Or secondary mod. Looking back from adulthood, Deborah is able to unpick the mysteries of grown-up secrets and relationships that were truly baffling to her at the time.<br /><br /><b>Packed with period detail, this is a story that is alternately affectionate, nostalgic, chilling and mysteriou</b>s. Like travelling back in time with the Doctor. Jon Pertwee, of course!</p>
Julie Ma
<b>I LOVED, LOVED, LOVED <i>Levitation for Beginners</i> by Suzannah Dunn. It's so brilliant, and sinister and well-observed. </b>It reminds me of <i>Cat's Eye</i> by Margaret Atwood but with something magical all of its own
Victoria Gosling, author of Bliss & Blunder
<b>Her dissections of the quiet hell of family life are splendid</b>, and she has an absolutely convincing voice of her own
Malcolm Bradbury, praise for Darker Days Than Usual
All adolescent life is here, lovingly portrayed, captured with breathtaking accuracy. <b>Suzannah Dunn is a gifted writer</b>
The Times, praise for Blood Sugar
<p>Compelling power...<b>Dunn shows again her gift for making the ordinary seem extraordinary</b></p>
The Times, praise for Venus Flaring