She is a stylist with a wide-ranging and subtle mind. Shes a genius, I believe, because she lights up every subject she touches. Why [ is she] underrated? She is personally modest, and her work doesnt fit into a category. She is too original for the market. -- Hilary Mantel This is a wonderful book, and almost not a book at all, more a window into another mind It is a gift Wroe shares. She registers commonplace things with poetic intensity A rich, radiant ramble More, please. Yet if she had written an autobiography it would almost inevitably have followed a standard pattern, wheras Six Facets of Light is unprecedented, unpredictable and unforgettable. -- John Carey * Sunday Times * Ann Wroe is a versatile and adventurous writer, and Six Facets of Light is as delightful as it is unexpected. Here the world's most mysterious medium has found its most passionate hymnist. -- John Banville You get a sense that Ann Wroe took great delight in writing this book It takes an emphatically personal approach Wroes quicksilver prose brings her meditations to glinting life. The attuned eye of the naturalist combines with the poets sharpened sensitivity in descriptions as intricately detailed as they are idiosyncratically evocative As far as this reviewer is concerned, it put the light in delight. -- Rachel Campbell-Johnston * The Times * [It] lays the writer bare and offers up a host of treasures, some of which will resonate and stick and become part of the readers own armoury of images and anecdotes There are some wonderful pickings in this allusive, largely Christo-centric book. -- Honor Clerk * Spectator *
Ann Wroe is the Obituaries editor of The Economist, and has written its weekly obituary for almost two decades. She is the author of eight previous works of non-fiction, including biographies of Pontius Pilate (shortlisted for the Samuel Johnson Award and the W.H. Smith Award), Perkin Warbeck, Shelley, Orpheus (winner of the Criticos Prize) and St Francis. She lives in Brighton and London.