In this novel, the project of living is rendered with compassionate clarity. - THE NEW YORK TIMES
Thomas's imitation of wandering minds is flawless and yet entirely comprehensible. Without drifting into stream of consciousness, she nonetheless reproduces that vast galaxy of thoughts that revolves around the dark matter of anxiety at the center of each life. Although, in one sense, nothing 'happens' in this novel, there's something uniquely revealing about it... The structure of The Performance forces Thomas to create movement even while her characters are sitting stock still, but she rises to the challenge. We're drawn into the cares of these women's lives and made to care for them... The Performance is an insightful response to Beckett's 60-year-old classic and a thoughtful reflection on what's burying women in the modern age. - THE WASHINGTON POST
The ideas underpinning The Performance are certainly provocative and how each woman interacts with and is altered by the play enacts beautifully the dialectical relationship between art and life. - THE WEEKEND AUSTRALIAN
intimate, poignant and darkly funny... Much like Beckett, Thomas is more interested in the untangling of inner truths than in external incident, and her novel is quietly transformational. As the curtain falls on both the book and the performance, it is us and the characters alike who are changed in thought, if not yet in deed. - SUNDAY TIMES
Claire Thomas has constructed, with graceful precision, a near-perfect wind-up music box of a novel in The Performance... [She] is deliciously clever and self-aware. Not a sentence is overwritten... Thomas handles themes of love and grief, family and the environment, with breath-snatching wisdom. - ARTS HUB
Written with passion, The Performance is a brave book: unafraid of confronting the dissonances of living in a modern Australia. - THE CONVERSATION
Through beautifully wrought prose the author digs into the emotional hearts of their everyday lives. - THE AUSTRALIAN WOMEN'S WEEKLY
Thomas's innovative novel, which spans curtain up to lights down, makes excellent use of Beckett's text... an original, at-a-sitting read. - DAILY MAIL