Author:Laura van den Berg

Things I will never forget: my name, my made-up birthday…The dark of the Hospital at night. My mother’s face, when she was young.
Things other people will forget: where they come from, how old they are, the faces of the people they love. The right words for bowl and sunshine…What is a beginning and what is an end.
Joy spends her days working the graveyard shift at a store outside Boston and nursing an addiction to cough syrup, an attempt to suppress her troubled past. But when a sickness that begins with silver blisters and memory loss and ends with death sweeps the country, Joy, for the first time in her life, seems to have an advantage: she is immune.
Laura van den Berg's critically acclaimed debut novel is at once a hauntingly beautiful portrayal of a dystopian future and a powerful exploration of loneliness.
A beautiful and compelling read
—— Ann PatchettOne of the most freakishly talented young writers at work today
—— Karen Russellpleasingly strange ... impressively original
—— The New York Times Book ReviewOriginal piece of dystopian fiction...disturbing and thought provoking...
—— Daily Maila distinctive new voice…original…intoxicating
—— BBCSpellbinding. . . Find Me is crafted to be consumed in small sips, though with a novel so full of mystery and surprise, the temptation is to gulp…
—— O, The Oprah MagazineA fresh spin on apocalyptic stories, Find Me beautifully evaluates memory loss and the stories we tell ourselves
—— Huffington PostA timeless chronicle of self-discovery…unforgettable…
—— Time OutA haunting exploration of loneliness
—— Marie ClaireLaura van den Berg is the best young writer in America
—— Claire Cameron, author of The Bear , Salon[Laura’s stories are ]… uniformly excellent - emotionally complex, very raw - but always with a mixture of pathos and humour that made me think of Lorrie Moore
—— Dave EggersSad, eerie, smart, cynical and heartbreaking
—— Robin WassermanThis elegiac debut novel … lingers and aches in the memory
—— The GuardianA must read
—— Stylist MagazineThis is a thoughtful, touching story about survival—about finding ways to heal and reasons to live.
—— PeopleIn understated prose, Laura creates Joy’s distorted and strange world. As we enter into that fictional world, we see that it reflects, in many ways, the real world where we find ourselves today. And in Joy’s loneliness and desire to connect, we recognize ourselves.
—— The Los Angeles Review of BooksMarvellous
—— Vanity Fairhauntingly beautiful . . . Don’t miss this remarkable book
—— Bustlesteeped in the anxieties of our era
—— New York Times[a] brilliant and claustrophobic novel
—— VICEone to watch out for
—— The IndependentA very impressive, must read for fans of STATION ELEVEN, so unsettling but subtle too. I loved FIND ME…
—— Eva Dolana moving, and frequently funny, exploration of character and of trauma
—— Independentso compelling ... an unforgettable debut
—— Irish Independenta wonderful read
—— Nina Allan , InterzoneLike Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale or Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go, van den Berg’s debut novel presents a frighteningly plausible near-future dystopia grounded in human elements… heartbreakingly real and compellingly wrought
—— Library JournalFind Me, her transfixing first novel, is in keeping with her short stories thematically, and yet, in its deep soundings, it’s a commanding departure. . . Van den Berg’s enveloping novel of a plague and a seeker in an endangered world reveals what it feels like to grow up unwanted and unknown in a civilization hell-bent on self-destruction. It is also a beautifully strange, sad, and provocative inquiry into our failure to love, cherish, and protect. But ultimately, Find Me is a delving story of courage, persistence, and hope
—— BooklistIn Find Me, van den Berg depicts a life slowly coming into focus—it’s blurry and impressionistic at times, sometimes deliriously scattered. But out of the fog of memory and the haze of drugs emerges a sense of clarity that’s deep and moving and real
—— The Boston GlobeFrom this memorable novel's eerie first paragraph to its enigmatic ending, Laura van den Berg has invented something beautiful indeed
—— LA TimesThis is one of my favorite novels of 2015, and we’re not even IN 2015 yet . . .The language is beautiful, spare, and carefully crafted, and the characters are fully realized and unforgettable. There is tension and redemption and insight and even humor in these pages, and they make for a really incredible read
—— BookriotSurreal adventures blend with a reflective and sad sensibility in van den Berg’s lyrical debut novel
—— Library JournalBoth novels offer precision of language and metaphor and scene even as what is being constructed feels messy, chaotic, sad, hopeless... Both orphaned and alone in the world, both so completely real, both telling a story that feels important and exciting to read. I feel lucky to have stumbled upon these books this year, and challenged by them to be better
—— The MillionsThis debut novel by acclaimed short story writer van den Berg tends to lean much closer to the realms of literary fiction with its complex psychology. . . Van den Berg's writing is curiously beautiful
—— Kirkusa strange beauty in this apocalyptic tale
—— Psychologies






