Magma is profane, funny, and uncomfortably honest about what happens when we substitute someone?s image of us for self-knowledge. -- Brandon Taylor ? VultureA compulsive, propulsive debut about a young woman?s exploration of love and sex . . . Thora Hjörleifsdóttir?s narrator pulls us into the tale of her near undoing and her struggle to find her own value. -- Lily King, author of Writers & LoversA luminous and poetic novel . . . How to describe the slow escalation by which possession becomes control, and power abuse? [Hjörleifsdóttir] has created a whole new landscape for storytelling. -- John Freeman, author of How to Read a NovelistA novel that speaks directly to its present age . . . An incredibly compelling book ? Iceland National RadioBulleted, candid, first-person prose that parallels the quickness in which women?s lives can become less their own. ? Lit HubUnsettling . . . an achingly plausible mix of verve and bluntness . . . Throughout, Hjörleifsdóttir's fresh prose disturbingly evokes the young woman?s unmoored state. The burnished micro-chapters form a narrative necklace of gems. ? Publishers WeeklyHjörleifsdóttir's heart-wrenching American debut is a raw and empathetic depiction of a woman so subtly manipulated into an abusive relationship that she loses her sense of self and cannot find a way out . . . masterfully written ? BooklistArresting . . . [Magma] urgently explores the challenges and costs of a young woman?s passionate yet toxic relationship. ? Time, 'Best Books of Summer 2021'Beautifully spare prose . . . A powerful excavation of what can go wrong when you love another. -- Literary Hub, '38 Novels You Need to Read This Summer'Mesmerizing . . . Hjörleifsdóttir dives deep into the fire-rivers of lust, just how much humiliation we?re willing to tolerate in the name of love. -- Oprah Daily Thora Hjörleifsdóttir has published three poetry collections with her poetry collective, Imposter Poets. She lives in Reykjavík. Magma is her first novel.
Meg Matich earned her Master of Fine Arts from Columbia University's Creative Writing program. She'sreceived support for her literary translation work from DAAD, the Icelandic Literature Centre(through publishers), PEN, and the Fulbright Commission. She has translated poetry into Englishand Icelandic for UNESCO, as a representative of Reykjavik UNESCO in Lviv, Ukraine.