A daring and intelligent debut. -- Pam Norfolk The Lancashire Evening Post History has painted Magda Goebbels as the Medea of the Third Reich, but that hasn't dissuaded Meike Ziervogel from constructing a psychological profile that attempts to explain how a woman can murder her own children. -- Alfred Hickling The Guardian A disturbing book but one I'd recommend to anyone with interests from psychological profiling to Hitler's Germany. Our Book Reviews 9 out of 10 -- I found this a truly unique, fascinating read and one which has prompted me to seek out more literary studies and research on Magda Goebbels. The Friendly Shelf Meet a woman who, despite praying to remain virginal, had seven children. Meet a woman whose mother thought her hoity-toity, and spoilt, and who thought she should go to work in a factory at school age to know her place better. Meet a woman of whom her oldest daughter would write I don't care what Mother says. Mother isn't always right. No, she definitely isn't. All three women are, of course, one and the same, and they're Magda Goebbels, the woman who epitomised more than anyone the Nazi wife. The Bookbag Ziervogel is the brave woman who set up Peirene Press five years ago … Her own debut novel displays similar nerve … This is an ambitious and queasily unsettling novel. -- David Mills The Sunday Times This frank, disturbing novel is an intriguing mix of fact and fiction and pulls no punches. The author sets out to use the story to examine the psychological theory that unloved daughters destroy the people they love and then themselves … Ziervogel explores this disturbing theory with haunting originality and real flair. -- Christena Appleyard The Daily Mail Told in spare, simple prose, Ziervogel's depiction of a likely afterlife for Magda and her children, in which Helga must prostitute herself so that her family can eat, is particularly powerful. -- Lesley McDowell The Independent The book left me with many questions about Magda's decisions, but filling in the gaps gave the story an enduring quality and left me wanting to know even more about the women in Hitler's bunker. This is a brief, but powerful book. I highly recommend it. Farm Lane Books Blog "Magda" is a short, dark book, filled with unhappy people who go on to create other unhappy people. But it is also subtle and quiet and creeping. It's the sort of book that I think would be described as 'ambitious', given how many different styles and how much is touched upon in its 115 pages, but 'ambitious' feels like a word you apply to something that doesn't quite meet its goals. I think this does. -- Debbie Kinsey Mischief and Miscellany Where Ziervogel really shines is in her expert handling of the narrative's chronology; weaving back and forth over different points in the three women's lives, she enables the reader to piece together an innate understanding of the motives behind Magda Goebbels, the woman who was capable of murdering her six children when she knew Germany has been defeated. While this makes for uneasy, and sometimes agonising reading, the end result is worth it; one comes away unable to forget Ziervogel's haunting insight into one of the Nazi's most notorious female members. -- Sadie Levy Gale Cherwell But are Magda's own crimes committed out of love and fear, or selfish madness? Ziervogel has given us a novel which is frustratingly fragmentary, but also challenging, clever, and fascinating as an insight into how generations of Germans are summoning the courage to address the horror of the last century. -- Amanda Craig The Independent