Reviews

“[An] assured debut . . . Overfamiliarity has diluted the significance of the word ‘miracle’—used to describe diets, cures, even sandwich spread—but Roe suggests that the miraculous is a perpetual human craving. The Miracle Girl is a hopeful meditation on the mysteries of faith.”
The New York Times Book Review

“[A] winning debut . . . Roe’s story feels just right for our desperate and despairing time, when a miracle—any miracle—will do . . . Lively, pitch-perfect and assured. Readers will be wanting to hear more from this writer.”
Kirkus Reviews, starred review

 “A treatise on modern religion and theology as well as a stunning exegesis of the world beyond our empirical nature, it is above all a wonderful study and story of the multi-faceted, often miraculous sides of human nature.”
Author Exposure

“Roe creates characters who feel real, who are beautiful and flawed and full of desire and regret and love and pain. He brings us into a world where terrible things happen to ordinary people and it’s hard not to want a miracle girl to save them. And, because we recognize this world, we want that miracle girl to be real, to save us, too.”
Arizona Daily Sun

“Roe’s exploration of the need for belief makes for a strong debut.”
Booklist

“While the novel features a cast of lovable losers and fortune’s fools right out of a Nathanael West novel, Roe’s takes on hope, faith, and our willingness to believe makes The Miracle Girl a memorable debut.”
San Diego CityBeat

“An uplifting debut.”
Coastal Living

“To believe or not to believe — that is the question facing all who are touched by the comatose ‘miracle girl’ at the swirling center of Andrew Roe’s dazzling debut. But more than an exploration of the mysteries of faith, it’s also the unforgettable story of one family’s struggle against tragedy. The result is an uplifting miracle of a book.”
Will Allison, author of Long Drive Home

“In The Miracle Girl, we’re reminded that the desire for miracles always connotes dissatisfaction, even as it articulates a hope. Roe deftly explores this paradox . . . [and] examines the strange responsibility of being believed in. A stunning, confident debut.”
Peter Rock, author of The Shelter Cycle

“An incisive and insightful critique of America, investigating where we put our faith and why . . . It’s a novel about what it means to be human, to be lost or broken, a little or a lot, and to seek connection and hope and maybe even transcendence in the world around us.”
Doug Dorst, author of S. and Alive in Necropolis

“Andrew Roe’s novel struggles to contain the breadth of the author’s talent. There is a precision and purpose in each sentence. The characters are steeped in complexity. These are people we all know, struggling with both the familiar and the magnificent. A stunning and captivating debut.”
Jason Mott, author of The Wonder of All Things