Katherine A. Powers's column on books and writers ran for many years in The Boston Globe and now appears in The Barnes & Noble Review under the title "A Reading Life." She is the editor of Suitable Accommodations: An Autobiographical Story of Family Life--The Letters of J. F. Powers, 1942-1963, forthcoming in 2013.
"Business booms for Mrs. Fitz, but then the hilarious manipulations of the press and her superiors give way to a Fascistic reign of terrors over her inferiors, and Mr. Kennedy has us pinned at precisely the point where the comic turns nasty." --The New Yorker
"Perhaps the funniest American novel since John Kennedy Toole's prize winner, A Confederacy of Dunces." --Newsweek
"God knows, it must be hard to write a funny book about New England banking, but Kennedy has done it . . . Frankie Fitzgibbons is an inspired creation, a cross between Maggie Thatcher and Darth Vader." --Boston Phoenix
"Kennedy is a master storyteller . . . The author's vision has to do with a real wisdom of the heart." --Raymond Carver
"A wonderful comic . . . a ribald, risible and riveting read." --People Magazine
"Truly . . . one of this country's finest writers." --Boston Globe
"The kind of novelist who gets high praise in sophisticated places." --Anatole Broyard, The New York Times
"There are plenty of funny scenes in Ride a Cockhorse, a number of them good enough to make you laugh out loud." --New York Newsday
"Ferociously comic . . . a believable blend of farce and tragedy. Raymond Kennedy is a novelist of such diabolical artistry that he may be the most original American writer since Flannery O'Connor . . ." --Joseph Coates, The Chicago Tribune
"If a sentence Raynond Kennedy wrote, then it is a sentence an artist made." --Gordon Lish
"It's only the very rare work that can officially be deemed a classic a mere twenty-one years after its publication, but such a one is Raymond Kennedy's Ride a Cockhorse, newly republished New York Review Books' marvelous Classics series. I can't imagine how I missed Ride a Cockhorse the first time around, for it is one of the funniest novels I've ever picked up and also quite sui generis: Kennedy's voice is entirely idiosyncratic, his tale of a reign of terror at an unremarkable Connecticut valley bank a startling mixture of the ludicrous and the appalling." --Brooke Allen, Barnes and Noble Review