Serre's language is tight and fabulist, a slim and sensuous fairy tale that reads like something born from an orgy between Charles Perrault, Shirley Jackson, and Angela Carter.-- "Full Stop"
In three mysterious tales, Serre explores the moral implications of self-destructive impulses, storytelling, and sexual taboo. Serre, one of France's finest fabulists, returns in full force in this strange, beguiling collection about the perils of desire in all its forms.-- "Kirkus" (7/1/2019 12:00:00 AM)
Three wild novellas--tied together with dream logic, each of these stories plumbs the depths of desire, morality, and our willingness to go on an unpredictable ride.--Katie Yee "LitHub"
Hypnotic, enchanting.-- "Publishers Weekly"
Drawing on fairy tales and psychoanalysis, pornography and poststructuralism, Serre constructs stunning and searing stories. Dreamy and deeply sexual.-- "Publishers Weekly (starred)"
Serre's collection speaks bravely, poignantly and perversely to the hazards of alienation--from one's self, from those around you--while also illuminating the blessings and curses, the gifts and sacrifices, of being called to dwell in the gauzy world of stories.--John Biscello "Riot Material"
Genuinely original--and, often, very quietly so. Prim and racy, seriously weird and seriously excellent--The Governesses is not a treatise but an aria, and one delivered with perfect pitch.--Parul Sehgal "The New York Times"
"With its psychological reality infused with fabulism, Serre's fiction seems to have invented its own genre of literature. The Fool & Other Moral Tales is an impeccable collection."--Ankita Chakraborty "The New York Times"