“Like Wharton, Acampora seems to understand fiction as a kind of elegant design. As characters reappear in one story after another, Acampora reveals herself as a careful architect . . . [The Wonder Garden] accomplishes great depth of characterization, in no small part because Acampora doesn’t shy from the unpalatable . . . There is a barbed honesty to the stories that brushes up against Acam¬pora’s lovely prose to interesting effect. Often a single sentence twists sinuously, charged with positive and negative electricity.”—New York Times Book Review
“Acampora is a brilliant anthropologist of the suburbs . . . [The Wonder Garden] is reminiscent of John Cheever in its anatomizing of suburban ennui and of Ann Beattie in its bemused dissection of a colorful cast of eccentrics. But Acampora’s is entirely her own book . . . Acampora’s ability to lay bare the heartaches of complex individuals within an utterly unique imaginative world is worthy of high praise.”—Boston Globe
“In 13 sharply drawn linked stories, Acampora reveals the complexities beneath the polish and privilege of a prosperous Connecticut town.”—People
“Acampora’s stories show that an Anna Karenina principle still applies: . . . Add well-drawn characters, interesting plots, cultural zingers and dead-on critiques of consumerism and Acampora delivers a page-turner.”—Dallas Morning News
“Questions of the pursuit of art, stagnation, youth and aging, and how to exist on a planet that is, increasingly, made up solely of emergencies, are grounded in the richness (no pun intended) of Sylvie and Louisa’s characters. And, as in The Paper Wasp, Acampora’s descriptions of the strangeness of artworks are not to be missed.”—Literary Hub, Best Summer Reads
“A thrilling drama . . . As Gabriel draws both Louisa and Sylvie into his thrall, their lush small town stops feeling quite so staid.”—Vogue
“An intense anthropological look at the suburbs, desire and the secrets people keep.”—WBUR, 5 Books to Cozy Up With This Fall
“In the tradition of territory-marking novelists John Cheever and John Updike, Lauren Acampora expertly captures deep-pocketed suburban restlessness in The Hundred Waters…Through its delicate narrative circuitry and roving point of view, the novel gradually exposes a community that’s in crisis without even knowing it.”—Shelf Awareness (starred review)
“In this tightly paced novel that echoes Celeste Ng’s Little Fires Everywhere (2017),Tom Perrotta’s Mrs. Fletcher (2017), and A. Natasha Joukovsky’s The Portrait of a Mirror (2021), Acampora sets the idealism of youth against middle-age complacency and high-society reservations… With this gem of a novel, Acampora cements herself as a thrilling voice in fiction.”—Booklist (starred review)
“Arresting . . . Acampora achieves a sharp and tense depiction of an illusory and stultifying haven.”—Publishers Weekly
“Acampora weaves a tale of artistic ambition, climate activism, and the seductive allure of extravagant wealth. Told in the author’s signature lush prose… [T]his is an enchanting pool worth sticking your toe into.” — Kirkus Reviews
“With a fluid writing style and a plot that moves along quickly… Absorbing… Excellent.”—Library Journal (starred review)
Praise for The Paper Wasp
“Take The Talented Mr. Ripley, cross it with Suspiria, add a dash of La La Land and mix it all at midnight and this arty psychological stalker novel is what might result.”—New York Times Book Review
“A hypnotic tale of codependence that skewers our fascination with gossip and fame.”—O Magazine, “The Best Books by Women of Summer 2019”
“The Paper Wasp fixes its gaze on one magnetic and increasingly twisted friendship . . . hypnotic and sensual… Acampora’s prose has a seductive, pearlescent allure.”—TIME Magazine
“Acampora’s kaleidoscopic narrative shifts fluidly from Abby’s strange, shimmering images to Elise’s descent into tabloid erasure, artfully tracking the unexpected power shift between them.”—BBC.com
“This is the Los Angeles of weird cults and day-drunk stars, of struggling documentary filmmakers and mysterious but powerful directors . . . Utterly bizarre and completely bewitching, this twisted, delicious tale will grab you from the first page and hurl you over the edge.”—Kirkus Reviews (starred review)
“Acampora’s linked short story collection, The Wonder Garden, electrified literary critics, and this deeply disturbing, wildly inventive, and completely unpredictable debut novel is sure to do the same. Abby and Elise will be haunting readers’ dreams long after the last page.”—Library Journal (starred review)