Joyce Carol Oates's novel is a portrait of a culture hypnotized by its own
myths and the shattering reality of the personal effects it had on the woman
who became Marilyn Monroe.'Nobody has ever caught Marilyn more brilliantly in words than Oates.' John
Sutherland, Sunday Times 'Oates has been fearless in taking on a subject that
criss-crossed almost every important strand of mid twentieth century history
...Apart from her, only Don Delillo, among today's American novelists, and no
one at all among today's American women novelists, would be able to handle such
a huge cast of imagined and real characters ...A mighty - and a mesmerising -
book.' Elaine Showalter, Literary Review 'This novel deserves a wide audience.
Blonde is what whole shelvesful of Monroe biographies should be but are not - a
fabulous reinvention of the life of a fabulous reinvention, a mirror on our
collective vanities and a cracking page turner to boot.' Evening Standard
'Blonde is an epic achievement, a masterpiece, a piece of art so shatteringly
well-conceived and lavishly-wrought that at times it almost does not seem like
a mere book ...If this book doesn't catapult Joyce Carol Oates into British
best sellerdom, nothing will.; Julie Myerson, Independent on Sunday 'Novelists such as John Updike, Philip
Roth, Tom Wolfe and Norman Mailer slug it out for the title of the Great
American Novelist. But maybe they're wrong. Maybe, just maybe, the Great
American Novelist is a woman.' The Herald