Universally recognized as a major poet, Susan Howe should also be known as the most innovative, the most thrilling essayist writing today.--Eliot Weinberger
No other poet now writing has Howe's power to bring together narrative and lyric, scholarship and historical speculation, found text and pure invention.--Marjorie Perloff
Reaching back through Hawthorne, Dickinson and beyond, Susan Howe taps a stream of American thinking that is as as clear and fresh as a draught of well water. She is our conscience, our voice, our song.--John Ashbery
Howe's brilliant, idiosyncratic essay is--like much of her work--a combination of fierce rigor and deep generosity. Howe unlocks.--Ben Lerner
Susan Howe is a kind of poststructuralist visionary.--Bruce Campbell
Marvelous with a visionary apprehension of what is to come, telepathic communication with past poetries, histories, lives, material and spiritual realities.--Jonathan Creasey "The Los Angeles Review of Books"
She manages to balance the most cerebral passages with a sharp eye for just the right detail...Howe is not for casual readers, but serious ones will be amply rewarded.-- "Publishers Weekly"
For fans of Howe's poetry and readers fascinated by artistic process.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
Howe's words give the impression of echoing another, hidden poetry of which we catch only fragments, like an opera sung in another room--except that the other room is death, or history, or the ineffable.--Geoffrey O'Brien "The Village Voice"
The end result is something of a photographic negative: history refreshed and personalized by virtue of its own estrangement.--Dustin Illingworth "3: AM"
Monomania has its rewards--an incantatory power that shines through. Howe's images, being historical as well as biographical, have the eerie shading of ghosts half-believed in, giving a surreal, dreamlike atmosphere reminiscent of Borges at his sharpest.-- "Kirkus Reviews"
An important voice in contemporary literature, a signal inheritor of an American poetic tradition. Like Dickinson, her Massachusetts muse, Howe turns the English of a self steeped in books such that every word, as in Scripture, glows with an almost moral quality.-- "Artforum"
As a poet and a critic she articulates precisely those soundings of uncertainty, those zones of failed or impaired utterance that constitute the literary history of America's uneasy commerce with the word.--Richard Sieburth "The Times Literary Supplement"
One of America's foremost poets.-- "Publishers Weekly"