Laings accomplished second novel, The Silver Book, feels like a precision-controlled environment. In taut sentences, Laing evokes the sensuous eroticism and incipient danger of it 1970s Italian setting, moving towards a shattering conclusion . . . rigorously researched and realised historical fiction -- Patricia Nicol * The Times * Donati is described as an illusionist. So, too, is Laing, who seamlessly inserts a fictional narrative into a real historical world . . . a prose that pares down and transforms the messiness of the real into sentence after sentence of unforced lucidity . . . the authors scene-setting is managed with deftness . . . a gripping novel that is, in many ways, a technical tour de force -- Lucasta Miller * Times Literary Supplement * Sublime . . . where the book really soars is in its visceral portrait of Italian renegade filmmaking . . . Laings prose is taut and cleareyed . . . This unsentimental style brings the 1970s Italian cinema scene to vivid life, making the work of Pasolini and Fellini feel fresh, daring and urgent -- Christopher Bollen * The New York Times * Laing draws on the Italian directors unsolved murder for their sumptuous second novel . . . A great chronicler of male genius, sexuality, loneliness and madness . . . Laing has such a gift for capturing shimmering details -- Olivia Ovenden * Observer * The Silver Book, an absorbing amalgam of fact and fiction, exalts Salo as an admonitory horror masterwork of our times -- Ian Thompson * New Statesman * Set on surreal Italian film sets, this noir-tinged novel explores queer desire, creativity and dangerous secrets. Loosely based on real events, it captures the glamour and moral fog of the 1970s art world * i Paper, 'Best Books to Read in November' * Laings writing is detailed to the point of being documentary, and much of this fascinating novel is about real-life people and the cinematic illusions they assembled by hand. But it has the urgency of fiction, pulsing with its characters deeply held desires and fears . . . The film has opened a door on to the past, and something is moving, down there in the dark, Danilo says to Nicholas. We can feel it too * Vulture, 'The Best Books of 2025' * An arresting narrative about art, filmmaking, and desire in 1970s Italy . . . Shimmery and dreamlike, The Silver Book lives up to the promise of its name * Los Angeles Review of Books * A transportive, hot-blooded book, flooded by Roman light, sticky heat, and scooter exhaustand a potent tribute to the fierce, uncompromising vision of Pasolini, whose dark warnings have come home to roost fifty years later * AnOther Magazine * Laings background as an arts writer, and their clear love of visual art, comes through in the language of beauty and pleasure that suffuses The Silver Book . . . The text is unabashedly queer and unapologetically erotic, a delight to read . . . they have a gift for capturing the subtle fluctuations of yearning and desire . . . Laings strength as a biographer and historian makes The Silver Book sing on a deeper level; their lush, beautiful prose is backed by meticulous research . . . In our own era of rising fascism, of increasing violence and conservatism, Laings novel feels eerily timely -- Emily Watlington * Art in America, '6 Books Were Looking Forward to in November' *