<b>Dagerman wrote with beautiful objectivity.</b> Instead of emotive phrases, he uses a choice of facts, like bricks, to construct an emotion
- Graham Greene,
<b>Dagerman can evoke such emotion in a single sentence</b>
- Colm Toibin,
<b>There are some writers (Kafka and Lorca immediately spring to mind) who come to enjoy the status of saint</b>; their lives and deaths constitute statements about existence and its proper priorities. <b>A saint of this type is the Swedish writer Stig Dagerman.</b>
Times Literary Supplement
<b>A writer of uncommon urgency and power</b>
- Siri Hustvedt,
<b>A literary giant in Sweden, Dagerman conjures a Strindbergian atmosphere of shadowy menace in his brief, intense novel, <i>A Moth to a Flame</i>... </b>The novel absorbs the reader effortlessly... The landscape round Stockholm, with its fog-bound flatlands and grey winter seas, is vividly evoked. <b>This moody, death-haunted novel is well worth reading</b>
Evening Standard
<b>This searing tale of bereavement and loathing feels all too relevant today</b>
Guardian