"Krasznahorkai's headlong comedy of obsession and wonderful squalor set in small-town Hungary. Majestic."-- "The New York Times Book Review"
"László Krasznahorkai's masterpiece."-- "The Millions"
Singular and uncompromising, Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming is a masterpiece by one of the great writers of our time."-- "National Book Award Judges' citation"
"Krasznahorkai establishes his own rules and rides a wave of exhilarating energy in this sprawling, nonpareil novel, which harkens back to early works such as Satantango...his vortex of a novel compares neatly with Dostoevsky and shows Krasznahorkai at the absolute summit of his decades-long project. Apocalyptic, visionary, and mad, it flies off the page and stays lodged intractably wherever it lands."-- "Publishers Weekly"
"A literary heir to Kafka, Beckett, and Dostoyevsky: Krasznahorkai's genius has been his ability to absorb the tectonic changes of politics and culture into his singular style. His challenge of despair is applicable under any economic system. Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming is his latest, longest, strangest, and possibly greatest novel?suffused with nihilism, but deeply funny."-- "The Baffler"
"Krasznahorkai is a pungent delineator of character, and the landscape of his imaginary city is peopled with figures as busy and distinctive as those of a painting by Bruegel. While the novel energetically pursues Krasznahorkai's habitual themes - disorder, spiritual drought, the impossibility of meaning in the absence of God - it does so in a tone that glitters with comic detail."--Jane Shilling "The New Statesman"