ANTHONY RUDOLF
Croft Woods is a profound and lyrical meditation on the world of plants, in relation to the soul, mortality and human destiny.
RUTH FAINLIGHT, in The Jewish Chronicle:
This traditionally structured meditation on plants, trees, the natural world and the underworld of the dead, has a profoundly English quality [...] The sequence is saturated with almost hallucinatorily, vivid, natural description, as precise as a pre-Raphaelite painting, and seems to be the deeply felt response to a transforming experience.
STEVE SPENCE, on the Terrible Work website
Croft Woods' is at once an elegy to the English countryside, a celebration of an actual place, while at the same time being a reverie on the nature of life and death.