The Colonial Comedy directs its reader towards the shadowy presence of colonial politics at the margins of the French novel, drawing our attention to an array of colonial objects and products, to conspiracies of financial speculation and exploitation, to the vagaries of colonial fortunes won and lost ... The book, indeed, is rich in its evaluation of an array of literary works and critical perspectives, and close readings are poignant and incisive.
Edmund Birch, Modern Language Review
More than once while reading Jennifer Yee's remarkable reclaiming of colonialism and empire in French metropolitan realist novels, I wished that it had been published several years earlier so that my own book could have benefited from its many insights and meticulous research ... The Colonial Comedy likewise earns its title: ample and exacting, witty and generous, it is a deeply probing work of literary and critical scholarship that brings nineteenth-century Realist fiction right into the twenty-first century global context where it belongs.
Susan Hiner, Nineteenth-Century French Studies