The Orgy is about the author's own psychological transformation as the place colors and shapes her interior life.--The Washington Post
The Orgy has enlarged the meaning of 'luminous.'--The American Scholar
Brilliant; full of vivid language and people half embarrassed, half excited, swept up in a mixture of Guinness and the sheer glamour of a ritual which has come from wilder, pre-Christian times.--The Observer
The Orgy is about the author's own psychological transformation as the place colors and shapes her interior life.--The Washington Post
Haunting. The author may have left a few sore bones behind her in Ireland, where we do not relish having the exact nature and extent of our festivities described in cold print. But she has an honest and inquiring mind. She didn't agree with the Irish woman who thought that, after America, everything in Ireland must look shabby. No, said Muriel Rukeyser, Ireland looks real. This American poet has a quick eye, too, for the things I find I love: the moon over Dublin and the mythic Post Office; the eternal fisherman casting a fly over the River Laune; the fuchsia blossoms that are the 'tears of Kerry.--The New York Times Book Review