Deliciously spine-tingling... all-consuming and mind-altering. Nothing else matters while there are pages to turn and, once the book is over, the world seems an emptier place. * Daily Telegraph *
This month's smartest (and creepiest) new novel is a hell of a read . . . An intensely writerly project that doesn't jettison the reader . . . It explores how stories seep from texts into the world; not only in that it follows a journalist investigating a cult horror-film director whose life is entangled in his fictions, but also because the pages are peppered with fake news article and websites. A narrative signifying narratives, this novel echoes . . . The action bullet-trains through an artfully plotted world of secret screenings and suspicious deaths. * GQ (Book of the Month) *
Night Film, the gorgeously written, spellbinding new novel by the dazzlingly inventive Marisha Pessl, will hold you in suspense until you turn the final page. * Stylist *
When Cordova's beautiful daughter is found dead in a warehouse, McGrath can't help but pick up the trail. His pacy narrative voice is interrupted by magazine interviews, text messages, Facebook pages; a Cordova fan forum even pops up on the printed page . . . The result is multiple narratives that read like real life (or a more exciting version of it) . . . Night Film doesn't cease to be with its last full stop. [Pessl] has developed a phone app and a website with extra material - a savvy move. * Vogue *
The real and the imaginary, life and art, are dizzyingly distorted not only in a Cordova night film - which a fictional Time article calls a spellbinding and emotionally harrowing experience - but in Pessl's own Night Film as well. McGrath's prologue opens with a dictum Everyone has a Cordova story, whether they like it or not. This book is ours. * Vanity Fair *