<b>Emma Donoghue's writing is superb alchemy, changing innocence into horror and horror into tenderness</b>
- Audrey Niffenegger, author of <i>The Time Traveler's Wife</i>,
<b>Fascinating . . . Like <i>The Turn of the Screw</i>, the novel opens irresistibly, when a young woman with a troubled past gets an enigmatic posting in a remote place</b> . . . Heartbreaking and transcendent and almost religious in itself
- Sarah Lyall, New York Times
A fine, fact-based historical novel, an old-school page turner . . . <b>Donoghue has written, with crackling intensity, about [spirituality's] power to destroy</b>
- Stephen King, New York Times Book Review
<b>A riveting allegory about the trickle-down effect of trauma</b>
Vogue
Donoghue mines material that on the face of it appears intractably bleak and surfaces with a <b>powerful, compulsively readable</b> work of fiction
Irish Times
<b>Deliciously gothic </b>
USA Today
<b>Heartbreaking and transcendent</b>
New York Times
<b>Fans of Emma Donoghue's first novel <i>Room</i> will not be disappointed with <i>The Wonder</i></b> . . . a tale of claustrophobic suspense and the intense relationship between a woman and a child
Red Magazine
<b>Like [Room], <i>The Wonder</i> explores a dark, insular, and rigidly controlled environment</b> . . . there is more to this mystery than superstitions and local dialect.
The Oprah Magazine
<b>Donoghue proves herself endlessly inventive . . . This is the kind of book that will keep you up at night and make you smarter</b>
- Julie Buntin, Cosmopolitan
<b>Ingenious </b>
Wall Street Journal
<b>Lib is a heroine the modern woman can admire</b>
Time Magazine
Now a major Netflix film from the makers of Normal People and Room, starring Florence Pugh.
'An old-school page turner with crackling intensity' – Stephen King
'Powerful, compulsively readable' – The Irish Times
Eleven-year-old Anna O'Donnell stops eating, but remains miraculously alive and well. A nurse, sent to investigate whether she is a fraud, meets a journalist hungry for a story . . .
Set in the Irish Midlands in the 1850s, Emma Donoghue's The Wonder – inspired by numerous European and North American cases of 'fasting girls' between the sixteenth century and the twentieth – is a psychological thriller about a child's murder threatening to happen in slow motion before our eyes.
Part of the Picador Collection, a series celebrating fifty years of Picador books and showcasing the best of modern literature.