"One of the great, and greatly demanding, literary pleasures of the year." —The New York Times"Schattenfroh is extremely long and prodigiously learned, with scenes—and even sentences—that veer from one century to another, and with a taste for literary and art historical in-jokes that might try the patience of even the most erudite reader. All the more impressive, then, is Max Lawton’s translation, which renders Lentz’s flinty though extravagant German into English sentences that are clear, nimble, and frankly full of beans, capturing the propulsive energy of the original text without sacrificing its difficulty." —New York Review of Books"Michael Lentz’s Schattenfroh attempts to tell the history of the annihilated world. Yet Lentz constantly prods his reader to ask who the author of that history is, and what they might be leaving out, despite their claims to completeness." —Cleveland Review of Books"What does Schattenfroh do? Intrigue, frustrate, hypnotize, even—yes—entertain, after a certain point. What novels are supposed to do, in other words—which, we begin to realize, is not actually to create Presence but to carve around it." —Los Angeles Review of Books"A number of this fall’s biggest books are unusually long. The translated novel Schattenfroh, by Michael Lentz, described by one German reviewer as 'a genius, insane, dark or ridiculous book before which one can only helplessly surrender,' is just over 1,000... Begin relengthening your attention span now." —Vulture"A narrative wonder." —The Washington Post"A novel of titanic ambition, Schattenfroh draws on the esoteric, overlooked corners of human history to trace the thoughts of one man wrestling with existence. Elegant in its thematic layerings, massive in scope, and replete with baffling linguistic skill, this is a literary landmark." —Foreword Reviews, starred review"Lentz takes readers on a deep exploration of the relationship between art, language, suffering, and redemption. For those willing to go the distance, this monumental and taxing work offers rich rewards." —Publishers Weekly"Schattenfroh is a deep and mighty book that forces the reader to not only think of the word 'metaphysics,' but to feel with their own skin its fearsome presence in our world." —Vladimir Sorokin"What competition can we talk about when dealing with perhaps the greatest German-language novel of the 21st century up to now? This in equal measure baroque and surrealist explosion of a novel belongs to the pantheon of the best works of world literature published in the past two decades." —The Untranslated"The novel Schattenfroh is without a doubt one of the most interesting experiments in German-language literature in recent years. … Schattenfroh is a prose work which goes far, far beyond the affairs of the current literary scene." —Andreas Puff-Trojan, SWR2 Archivradio"Depending on how you look at it, it is a genius, insane, dark or ridiculous book before which one can only helplessly surrender." —Andrea Köhler, Die Zeit"Schattenfroh is a wonder of technique and cultural meaning every bit as solid and fragile as a sculpture by Da Vinci. Its appearance marks bravura performances by Lentz and Lawton, with special thanks to Will Evans at Deep Vellum." —The Book Beat"Compulsively readable." —Pittsburgh Review of Books