"<i>Victorian Pain</i> is a clear-eyed, beautifully written investigation of the role and uses of pain in the work of John Stuart Mill, Harriet Martineau, Charlotte Brontë, Charles Darwin and Thomas Hardy. . . . No one who is fortunate enough to read this book will look at the works it discusses in the same way again."
Times Literary Supplement
"Ablow explores the idea of pain in Victorian thought and literature, navigating between understanding pain as private, incommunicable, and pre-social (theorized most prominently in Elaine Scarry's <i>The Body in Pain</i>, CH, Jan'86) and theories of pain as mediated by language and produced through social life."
Choice
"Victorian Pain provides a needed example of the rewards of philosophically informed literary criticism, one that should encourage other scholars and students to greater ambition and independence of thought. Finding intellectual inspiration in unusual places, Ablow has crafted a convincing and widely resonant argument."—Andrew H. Miller, author of The Burdens of Perfection: On Ethics and Reading in Nineteenth-Century British Literature
"Breathtakingly original. Victorian Pain is erudite, vastly informed, yet utterly readable."—Adela Pinch, author of Thinking about Other People in Nineteenth-Century British Writing