"What I Know About You is a cerebral yet emotionally resonant slow burn with an intriguing structure that serves Chacour’s plot extremely well. In any language, this is a devastatingly beautiful story." – Dory Cerny, Quill & Quire, ★ STARRED Review
“What I Know About You announces Chacour as a storyteller of rare ability: deeply emotional in his substance, elegant and restrained in his style. Chacour is a master of perspective and careful revelation. In his hands, this story about taboo love and a family’s legacy overflows with crushing beauty as it grips readers in its world. What I Know About You is cruel and tender, surprising and inexorable, delicate and overwhelming, necessary and timeless. It is a story that is unlikely to be forgotten.” – 2024 Atwood Gibson Writers' Trust Fiction Prize jury
"A splendid exercise in melancholy and heartbreak with highly empathetic characters, Chacour’s first novel is beautifully written and superbly translated from the French by Pablo Strauss. It is not to be missed." – Michael Cart, Booklist ★ STARRED Review
"The slow-burn story of Tarek, a Levantine Christian doctor whose life seems prescribed for him in every matter, even love...Chacour’s exceptional restraint in divulging information lets the tension build, carrying the book into the revelation of who is writing Tarek’s story. All the author’s formal risks result in well-earned rewards." – Kirkus, ★ STARRED Review
"At its core, What I Know About You is a profoundly human story – a tale of love, loss, and the enduring human spirit. Every emotion is earned and resonates deeply, a testament to Chacour’s skillful storytelling." – Britta Stromeyer, On the Seawall
"In his beguiling debut, What I Know About You, Éric Chacour delicately explores the circumstances that create distance between people, and the limits of what anyone can know about those they love...a richly textured portrait of Cairo from the 1960s through the 2000s, and a nuanced exploration of queer relationships." – Laura Stackton, Bookpage
This striking debut is a vivid novel about what honesty can cost you, even when almost everything is left unsaid." – Keith Mosman, Powell's
“A novel of secrets kept and vows broken among the members of a worldly, Levantine Christian family in Cairo, clinging to tradition amid radical societal change from the 1960s to the 21st century. That larger story is fascinating, but it takes a back seat to the even more intriguing twists and turns within the household. The sense of intimacy Éric Chacour (and his translator, Pablo Strauss) have achieved with What I Know About You is astonishing.” – James Crossley, Leviathan Bookstore
"Astute prose that reveals as much through words as it does through silences...What I Know About You is a heartrending novel in which unanswered questions and unvoiced feelings take on a life of their own." – Eileen Gonzalez, Foreword Reviews
"A magnificent debut novel about family secrets and loves that endure long after their breaking point." – L’Actualité
"A writer who charts his own course, polishing each sentence until it conveys the totality of the observable world, from the smallest gesture and look to the displacements contained in our life choices. A story of love, memory, and devastation." – Jury statement, Prix des cinq continents (winner)
"Éric Chacour’s writing is poetic and precise. A wonderful new voice and one of 2023’s most remarkable books." – Mali Navia, Chatelaine
"An intimate conversation fraught with things left unsaid and secrets revealed, told with a delicate understatement. Masterful." – Shirley Saver, Jury Chair, 2023 Première Plume award
"Certain novels leave an indelible mark – this is one of them." – Dominique Lemieux, Les libraires
"So powerfully resonant and ingeniously constructed, it is hard to believe this is a first novel." – Léa Harvey, Le soleil
"A beautiful debut about family secrets and loves that last far past their breaking point." – Julie Roy, L'Actualité
"A finely honed debut … with an intricate, original architecture." – Philippe Villard, Tribune de Genève
"A story of forbidden love, deep roots and escaping them … leavened with stylistic brio and profundity." – Odile Tremblay, Le Devoir
"A debut that already feels like a classic." – Mohammed Aïssaoui, Le Figaro
"Razor-sharp yet sensual prose … plumbs the depths of a man torn between two worlds and two eras, for a vibrant portrait of a changing society … Dazzling." – Anne-Frédérique Hébert-Dolbec, Le Devoir
"A sensual, intricate, political first novel." – Virginie Bloch-Lainé, Libération
"A sublime story of absence and reconciliation." – Sandrine Bajos, Le Parisien
"The writing is silken, suggestive, skillful and touching." – Sylvain Sarrazin, La Presse