The Independent in the review written by
Simon Kövesi, who is editor of the
John Clare Society Journal, summed the book to be "a heady mix of delicacy and grotesquery, intimacy and misanthropy." Author Adam Foulds notes that
The Norton Anthology of English Literature that he studied in his college days dedicated only four pages to Clare but the poet's reputation increased significantly after
Jonathan Bate published Clare's biography in 2003. Writing for
The Washington Post, editor
Ron Charles notes that the book is not the biography of Clare but "its finely tuned sympathy will bring you close to the soul of an exuberant poet". Charles also notes that the most moving parts of the book are of the episodes where Clare is wandering in the forest. The review in
New Statesman appreciates Foulds for penning Clare's character that thinks in poems and also deemed Dr Allen and Tennyson's scenes together as awkward because of the historical nature of the book. Journalist and author
Lionel Shriver notes that Foulds, who won
Costa Poetry Award in 2008, keeps the book poetic without losing the plot. She also appreciates that despite featuring two poets with a background of mental asylum, the book does not "conjure insanity as an exalted state of literary enlightenment."
The New Yorkers critic
James Wood mentions that Foulds has created his own poems in the book; like "thick curds of summer cloud moving slowly over"; while narrating the two poets and not simply borrowing their works. Indian writer
Neel Mukherjee calls the book a "subtle meditation on the mysterious nature of the creative process."
Awards The book was nominated for the
Man Booker Prize. It was shortlisted along with
Hilary Mantel's historic novel
Wolf Hall about
Thomas Cromwell,
A. S. Byatt's novel ''
The Children's Book'', Nobel laureate
J. M. Coetzee's novel
Summertime,
Simon Mawer's novel
The Glass Room and
Sarah Waters's gothic fiction novel
The Little Stranger.
The Quickening Maze was called a "rank outsider" when it was shortlisted with these books: Mantel's work won the award, as several sources had speculated it would. In 2010, it was nominated for the inaugural
Walter Scott Prize where it again competed with Mawer's
The Glass Room and Mantel's
Wolf Hall, where Mantel won. The following year in 2011 it won the
European Union Prize for Literature. == References ==