A disturbing allegory of life during wartime, in which little appears to happen while at the same time entire lives and worlds collapse. This is an important and powerful book.-- "The Times [London]"
Evelio Rosero has dipped his pen in blood and written an epic in 215 pages. If anyone has wondered if there is life in the Colombian novel after magical realism, this is the evidence of the extraordinary power of that country's literature.--Linda Grant "The Independent"
The Armies is written in a compressed, lean style, which addresses the difficulty of the material with uncompromising clarity. It is a fragile tone, but Anne McLean's translation does full justice to it.-- "Times Literary Supplement"
The best literary rendering of the Colombian conflict to reach American readers since Márquez...Nightmarish, surreal, yet true to life.--Megan Doll "Time Out New York"
A brutal but beautiful novel about life in Colombia ... has won the Independent foreign fiction prize [UK].--Alison Flood "The Guardian"
It is an extraordinary, devastating book, spare and gripping, by turns painful and cruel.... Rosero is unflinching.--Ben Ehrenreich "The Nation"
A scathing indictment of the current political situation in Colombia.--Roberta Gordenstein "World Literature Today"