The detail is exquisite, sometimes excruciating: the bleeding edge of peeled apple skin as the mother, her face tight, makes yet another pie. -Dana Goodyear, The New Yorker
In Cherry Hill, [Frank's] own pictures constitute a fully equal component of the memoir, as artfully composed as the accompanying text. . . . Cherry Hill resembles a dream, because like any artist, the young Jona was a dreamer. -Arthur Lubow, The New York Times
It's like holding a film in your hands. - Laura Dern
Enlisting Laura Dern to play your mother in a multimedia memoir is what one might call a mood-and executed here to brilliant effect. -Vanity Fair
[A] remarkable memoir-monograph hybrid . . . an astonishing book. -Shelf Awareness, starred review
In this eerily gorgeous and fascinating photo book/memoir, photographer Frank has re-created scenes from her own youth in Cherry Hill, New Jersey in the 1970s and '80s. [All] the trappings of the period are captured in Frank's vividly colorful pictures. -Kirkus Reviews
Truly the most satisfying memoir I have ever seen or read. Brilliant and beautiful and weird, Cherry Hill is like entering someone's dreams. -Hanna Rosin, host of NPR's Invisibilia
Jona Frank's photographs decant whole narratives; her prose unfurls in vivid scenes. You may (and probably won't be able to help but) fly through this heart-brimming bildungs-memoir in a single extended sitting, but that's just the start. The experience will likely haunt you for days and grace your life long thereafter. Remember, Remember, child Jona's inner voice thrums throughout the story, desperately. And thanks to the adult Jona's liberating act of reclamatory witness we do! - Lawrence Weschler, author of Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees
With characteristic humor and compassion, photographer Jona Frank uses her medium to capture and reframe that which so often remains unseen: the interior landscapes that define our childhood and, in turn, our sense of self. Cherry Hill conveys the monumentality of the everyday, and speaks to the all-too-often underestimated superpower of simply noticing. - Anne Collins Goodyear, Co-director, Bowdoin College Museum of Art
Reminiscent of a graphic novel and shot in a striking cinematic style, the imagery is vibrant and evocative. . . . Frank captures the tension of the time and readers can feel the tangible pressure she felt as a young girl looking to find her place in the world. - Homes & Interiors Scotland
Gorgeous and cool, Jona Frank's photography collection, Cherry Hill, features the actress Laura Dern posed in a variety of situations, evocative of the artist's own childhood. Could this be a new genre, the photographic memoir? - Campus Circle
Noteworthy. - The Criterion Collection
Through lavish set design and a cast of actors, Cherry Hill is a coming-of-tale tale about a child struggling with the confinements of domestic life. - It's Nice That
Every once in a long while, a photobook can take you on a deep and meaningful journey; visually, emotionally, intellectually. Cherry Hill - A Childhood Reimagined by the incredibly talented Jona Frank is one of those books. . . . An astonishing, complex, original, and beautiful memoir. -Elinor Carucci, artist
It is an exciting, inventive format with writing that transports you to a girl's inner life. The photographs are beautifully lit and constructed and you might just find yourself escaping into them, revisiting their details, quietly and on your own, like you did when you were a kid. -Photomonitor
Starring the inimitable Laura Dern, the 200 carefully staged photographs look to delineate the artist's growing up with a repressive mother figure and even more repressive expectations by cranking the white picket fence idealism up to 11 and thus rendering such false utopias ridiculous. . . . . Above all, the book looks to show the universal through the personal, presenting the struggles of girls grown-up and finding their place in both the family and in the world. - Creative Boom
Combine[s] text and image, playing on the rich associations of photography with truth and memory to tell personal histories. -photo-eye
The photographs are heartfelt but amusing. They could be straight out of a soap opera, if the episodes were soulful rather than facetious. -artillery
Akin to a graphic novel, this hybrid of personal essay and photography breaks open the memoir format. -The Eye of Photography
This book digs deep into one woman's journey, yet, we come away with a story for all. -Grenade in a Jar