<b>A tour de force. Hemon has given us a story of love and war like no other</b>
- Kamila Shamsie, author of <i>Home Fire</i>,
'Alexsandar Hemon's new novel is <b>immense</b>. ...<b> It contains almost as much as its title promises</b>. By turns <b>lyrical </b>and <b>sardonic</b>, it is as<b> emotionally compelling </b>as it is <b>clever</b>. I'll be surprised if I enjoy a novel more this year.'
Guardian
<b>A magnificent, ambitious masterpiece</b>
Financial Times
<b>A twisting, turning epic rooted in love in all its forms</b>; an odyssey of statelessness; a haunted museum of history ranging from Sarajevo to Shanghai and Jerusalem . . . <b>This life-stuffed novel is Aleksandar Hemon’s masterpiece</b>
- David Mitchell, author of <i>Cloud Atlas</i>,
<b>Beguiling</b> . . . Hemon is <b>a master wordsmith </b>and this novel contains multitudes
Daily Mail
<b>An explosive novel. Bursting with energy, wits, and insights</b>, it’s an epic meditation on history, philosophy, and human conditions. Aleksandar Hemon once again proves himself to be<b> one of our most innovative and invigorating novelists</b>
- Yiyun Li, author of <i>A Thousand Years of Good Prayers</i>,
<b>One of the finest novels I’ve ever read . . .</b> A feat of unfettered literary bravura. In short, <b>a masterpiece</b>
- Rabih Alameddine, author of <i> The Wrong End of the Telescope <i>,
The irrepressible voice of “The World and All That It Holds” glides along a cushion of poignancy buoyed by wry humor.
The Washington Post
'A powerful exploration of love, memory and world-shaking events'
Economist
An astoundingly expansive new novel from <b>one of my all-time favorite writers </b>. . . heartbreaking, thrilling . . . <b>an amazing accomplishment</b>
- Jesse Eisenberg,
A potent story of love, war, and displacement... <b>readers will delight in this sweeping epic</b>
Publishers Weekly
Powerful and beautiful...<b> Hemon pulls no punches in his most ambitious novel to date</b>
Kirkus Reviews
“The World and All That It Holds” would be an audacious title for a book by anybody except God — or Aleksandar Hemon. But this Bosnian American author will make you a believer.
The Washington Post
A wandering epic of a novel . . . This is a book about language, and its medium is a rich linguistic stew . . . The historical-fictional illusion he has created is<b> so engrossing, so generous in the abundant pleasures it offers the reader</b>
Guardian
An English-language writer of <b>verbal agility and</b> <b>ethical finesse . . .</b> Within this widescreen epic, he drills as piercingly as ever into the questions of language and freedom, choice and chance, that made the refugee a writer
Economist
<b>Piercingly acute</b>, and imbued with a sense of history – personal, emotional and world-transforming at the same time – which is <b>as entertaining to read as it is devastating</b>
Big Issue
The real miracle of “The World and All That It Holds” is that despite holding so much, we come to know the fragile joys of this one melancholy man so well that he feels written into our own past
The Washington Post
Hemon’s historical novel is every bit as ambitious as its title suggests... A true epic, charged with heartbreak and beauty.
Mail on Sunday