“This is not a timid text...Margot is the fully fleshed out, unpickled woman Steinbeck might have written: moody, sensitive, entrepreneurial, introverted, crafty, sometimes cruel…Margot is the living organism…Hatton handles her source material—Steinbeck's and Ricketts’ work particularly—with the kind of deep admiration that breeds familiarity and contempt. This is the kind of rich engagement that decenters without anger, that recognizes Steinbeck's brilliance but unapologetically fills in his blind spots.” - The Week
"A tasty stew of people, fish, and romance...A strength of Hatton's approach is her delicate yet dramatic descriptions of sea creatures, most of which few readers will have encountered...Local color bleeds through on every page...Overall, a mood of thwarted love reigns. You feel she knows her stuff, and there's poetry in it." - NPR.org
“[Hatton], who grew up in Monterey Bay herself, has written an impressively detailed and beautiful love story for her native home — but, like all complex love stories, there are myriad moments of darkness.” - Refinery29’s Books to Read in July
"Hatton’s debut novel is complex, with a palpable air hanging over all...and characters they will want to examine and understand...Though set on the shores of Monterey Bay, this is no beach read. The language and descriptions are compelling...the author has created an unforgettable debut." - Library Journal
"Like Euphoria and The Signature of All Things, Monterey Bay is about passion--for ideas as well as lovers--that soaks in so deeply you can't ever wash it away. By the novel's end, I was in love with Ed Ricketts and feisty Margot Fiske myself--and with Monterey Bay too, which Lindsay Hatton brings to life with phenomenal skill." - Celeste Ng, author of Everything I Never Told You
"Monterey Bay is expert on the obsessive intensities of loneliness and neglect, and the way passion can grow out of rage at one's self and situation, but where it really takes flight is in its portrait of its protagonist's sensual and dispassionate engagement with the natural world as both consolation and unexpected source of power." - Jim Shepard, author of The Book of Aron and Like You'd Understand Anyway
"Lindsay Hatton’s Monterey Bay is a tour de force of heart, history, and imagination. The novel is a love letter to the glorious Monterey Bay Aquarium, and Hatton renders its characters, human and animal alike, with nuance, originality and, above all else, rare and powerful compassion." - Bret Anthony Johnston, author of Remember Me Like This and Corpus Christi
“A fascinating, knotted cord tethers Margot Fiske to the men in her life: not just the enthralling Ed Ricketts, but her savvy, unsentimental father and two unlikely lifelong friends. The way these characters change and shape one another, with violence, business and sometimes tenderness, is examined by Hatton with a gratifyingly light touch and a searing intelligence." - Ann Napolitano, author of A Good Hard Look
“Hatton’s first novel, Monterey Bay, is just so beautiful ... Her book is full of sentences I wish I had written, and it’s such a bold act of imagination, unfolding across decades, mixing history and fiction with a confidence that’s awe-inspiring. All novels suffer from pithy summary. Monterey Bay is about a young woman and some old men who end up creating an aquarium on the titular body of water. But really, it’s a book about ambition, art, sex, obsession, and the devastation wrought on this planet by people — and the unsettling fact that no matter what we do to it, the planet will outlast us.” - Rumaan Alam, The Millions
"It’s something like The Virgin Suicides crossed with a beautifully illustrated encyclopedia of marine biology, and the result is extraordinary." - Totally Dublin
“The descriptions of marine life are sensuously precise…Hatton shapes a jagged coming-of-age and growing-old story with fine vignettes held together by Margot’s pluck and her commitment to feelings and memories that matter deeply. Along with creating a fully realized, realistic heroine seen across decades, Hatton is a writer of often exceptional prose.” - Kirkus (starred review)
"Fans of John Steinbeck and his Cannery Row stories will delight in this novel...Hatton, in her first novel, takes up a formidable challenge for herself, setting her story in one of American literature’s most famous locations. She does an excellent job of recreating the Cannery Row that no longer exists, honoring the memory of Steinbeck and Ricketts (the real-life inspiration for Cannery Row’s Doc) and all the workers who once toiled there, as seen through the eyes of a precocious teenage heroine." - Publisher's Weekly
“Hatton’s authoritative writing elicits strong emotions, and in this biographically shaped historical novel she brings to life the realm of John Steinbeck’s Cannery Row, including Steinbeck himself, Ricketts’s brooding patron.” - Booklist
"Hatton's prose is exceptional and combined with her notable subject, it renders a novel that evokes comparison with Steinbeck's Cannery Row. Like the latter, Monterey Bay is set in the liminal space of the intersections of place and time—shifting between Monterey in the 1940s and the late 1990s. Hatton intertwines memory and perception powerfully, and, like Steinbeck, she captures the quality of life on Cannery Row as something both tangible and elusive.." - The Steinbeck Review
"Monterey Bay...deftly conjures up a Cannery Row that can still exist in fiction...Hatton gives us plenty of memorable Cannery Row-like parties to revisit, and Steinbeck himself makes vivid and startling appearances. With intelligent, painterly prose, Hatton adds the story of Margot to the cast of characters who inhabited Cannery Row, suggesting that it is love that ultimately best connects past to present. To read Monterey Bay is to be invited to go back in time, and to join the party." - SF Chronicle
"[Hatton's] knowledge of the area and its history lend her novel an impressive richness of detail...One of the many interesting aspects of Monterey Bay is the way it occupies a tertiary kind of narrative space. Hatton’s version pays homage to Steinbeck... even as her version of Cannery Row and its inhabitants does not adhere strictly to the historical record. It’s a delicate balancing act, and Hatton accomplishes it with panache...Make no mistake, Monterey Bay is a thoroughly adult piece of historical fiction and Margot is no standard young-adult fiction heroine...She is not a character to be trifled with, and the blunt ways she deals with obstacles in her path are what give Monterey Bay its narrative acceleration and emotional drive...More than mere pleasant reading for the beach, Monterey Bay gets to the heart of a remarkable place, a vanished time and a singular relationship." - Portland Press Herald
"Monterey Bay runs on a powerful prose engine, steeped in poetry and vivid details. Hatton takes a lot of chances in her debut. She messes not only with history as we know it, but some of the most powerful fictionalized versions of history as well. She puts words in the mouths of Ed Ricketts and John Steinbeck, and it all manages to feel natural, organic and credibly tense...In re-writing both history and fiction, Lindsay Hatton succeeds on all levels. She brings you in with seductive prose, keeps you hanging with a steamy mystery, and brings it all together even as she takes history itself apart." - Rick Kleffel, Narrative Species