"Barba inhabits the minds of children with an exactitude that seems to me so uncanny as to be almost sinister."—Sarah Perry, the Guardian
"Barba is intensely alive to the shifting, even Janus-faced nature of strong feeling."—San Francisco Chronicle
"Such Small Hands is a magnificently chilling antidote to society’s reverence for ideas of infantile innocence and purity."—Financial Times
"Barba’s stunning and beautiful prose helps us realize that our adult incomprehension is not absolute."—Los Angeles Review of Books
"Each one of these pages is exquisite, and the end result is a perfectly expressed work that transmits the perverse and bizarre experience that is youth, where games signify life and death and where relationships are teased and pushed to the breaking point."—Music & Literature
"A lyrically rich and devastating portrayal of adolescent struggle."—ZYZZYVA
"A darkly evocative work about young girls, grief, and the unsettling, aching need to belong."&mdas;Kirkus Reviews (Starred Review)
"Barba explores what the dynamics of an orphanage reveal about any insular community and the trials of its inevitable outcast."—Idra Novey, author of Ways to Disappear
"Andrés Barba needs no advice. He has already created a world that is perfectly realized and has a craft that is inappropriate for a writer of his age."—Mario Vargas Llosa, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature
"In my opinion, Barba has become an essential writer."—Rafael Chirbes, author of On the Edge
"Andrés Barba is one of several impressive writers from Spain at work on fiction that brilliantly dissects the business of being alive."—Eileen Battersby, The Irish Times
"An unsettling, tightly controlled book."—Stephen Sparks, Green Apple Books (San Francisco)
"Such Small Hands is a stick of dynamite. Nothing like having your world rearranged in two sittings."—Mark Haber, Brazos Bookstore (Houston)
"I don't think I've ever read such a massively tiny book. A poignant and truly gratifying novel."—Nick Buzanski, Book Culture (New York)
"In stunning prose, Andrés Barba probes the fissures that words stitch together long enough to form a scar. Love, hate, trauma—they're tightly coiled in Such Small Hands into that most universal of scars, childhood, and the results, also like childhood, are unsettling."—Brad Johnson, Diesel, A Bookstore (Oakland)
"Andrés Barba's magnificent novel will haunt you, and continue to haunt you when you least expect it."—Caitlin Luce Baker, UniversityBook Store (Seattle)