Reader Score
76%
76% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 17 reviews on
*WINNER OF THE 2021 INTERNATIONAL BOOKER PRIZE*
*ONE OF PRESIDENT BARACK OBAMA'S FAVORITE BOOKS OF 2021*
Winner of the Los Angeles Times Book Prize for fiction
Shortlisted for the 2022 DUBLIN Literary Award
"Beguiling . . . Diop realizes the full nature of war--that theater of macabre and violent drama--on the page. He takes his character into the depths of hell and lets him thrive there . . . As violent and disturbing as these encounters are, they are rendered with such artistic grace that one derives a strange pleasure in reading about even the bloodiest of nights." --Chigozie Obioma, The New York Times Book Review
"Astonishingly good." --Lily Meyer, NPR "Harrowing . . . [At Night All Blood Is Black] confronts the historical image of Black soldiers by stretching barbarism to its ironic limits . . . What seems most pointed in Diop's novel is its exploration of what it meant for West African men to fight side by side, and to grieve one another." --Emmanuel Iduma, The New York Review of Books "Powerfully original . . . Unflinching in its exploration of the madness war can induce, Diop's novella is a remarkable piece of writing." --Nick Rennison, The Times (London) "The International Booker prize winner is a brilliant, shifting tale . . . [At Night All Blood Is Black] rewards rereading, which recasts the violent opening chapters in a new, even darker light . . . Quite unlike anything else." --John Self, The Observer "As in many of the best novels of active combat . . . Diop accentuates tragedy with bitter irony . . . There is great beauty here. Diop's sentences have a tidal quality, carrying in phrases worn smooth with repetition." --Jessi Jezewska Stevens, Foreign Policy "[David Diop] conveys the overwhelming impact of wartime trauma on a bewildered young man in lyrical language, translated by [Anna] Moschovakis into rhythmic and dynamic English prose." --The Economist "A stunning new novel about the plight of two Senegalese soldiers in the Great War offers a fresh perspective. It also introduces a singular talent . . . An immersive, propulsive read, one that searingly evokes the terrors of trench warfare, the relentless loss of life, and the irreparable damage inflicted on the human soul . . . Employing language that is, by turn, visceral and lyrical, Diop tells a devastating story of loss and inhumanity while enlarging our understanding of the war to end all wars." --Malcolm Forbes, Star Tribune "Heartbreaking and poetic . . . [At Night All Blood Is Black] addresses a story woefully absent from French history books - the inner life of African troops who fought in the French trenches in the first world war." --Angelique Chrisafis, The Guardian "Spare and devastating, At Night All Blood Is Black by French Senegalese author David Diop is a bone-chilling anti-war treatise . . . Resonates far beyond the geographic, political, racial and historical details . . . Diop has an ideal translator in Anna Moschovakis, who renders his prose into a gorgeously disturbing devolution of humanity. Overlapping bildungsroman, fever dream, morality tale and historical record, Diop creates an outstandingly affecting, genre-defying nightmare." --Shelf Awareness (starred review) "One could recommend this novella by its name alone. Fortunately, what its evocative and ominous title hints at--a dark story told in lyrical prose--is more than delivered on in David Diop's rhythmic, enchanting fiction (expertly translated from the French by Anna Moschovakis) . . . More than anything [Diop] shows just how slippery the self can be when individuals are placed within extraordinary, violent circumstances." --The A.V. Club "With elegant brevity, Diop presents a world with no firm dividing line between courage and madness, murder and warfare; the most dedicated killers are awarded the Croix de Guerre. Alfa's final transformation, as he attempts to atone for his guilt over the death of his friend, is unexpected, poetic -- and chilling." --Suzi Feay, The Spectator "Diop's short but emotionally packed second novel illuminates an underreported chapter in French and Senegalese history. Part folklore, part existential howl, and part prose poem, it is a heartbreaking account of pointless suffering . . . A searing, eye-opening tale of innocence destroyed." --Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Musical . . . Harrowing . . . The novel veers toward a transcendent ending . . . Diop's second novel is scalding, mesmerizing, and troubling in the best way. Highly recommended." --Library Journal (starred review) "[A] harrowing, nimbly translated English-language debut . . . Diop is sure to earn readers with this feverish exercise in psychological horror." --Publishers Weekly "An extraordinary novel, full of sadness, rage and beauty." --Sarah Waters, author of The Little Stranger "David Diop's All Blood is Black at Night is an unrelenting take on war, race, masculinity, and colonialism. Most of all, Diop's short, sharp, and serrated novel is a visceral dramatization of how our humanity and inhumanity are forever intertwined." --Viet Thanh Nguyen, Pulitzer Prize winner and author of The Sympathizer "David Diop's At Night All Blood Is Black is a particularly pertinent reflection on the evils of war, as well as a profound exploration of the human soul." --J.M.G. Le Clézio, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature