Hungarian maestro László Krasznahorkai is laconic and shrewd, as practical as he is existential, capable of wresting huge laughs as well as immense profundity from the commonplace and the way in which we choose to respond to it.
Irish Times
The Hungarian maestro is on peerless form with a work of dark wit and dizzying prose
- Anthony Cummins, Observer
Mesmerisingly strange ... this blackly absurd satire of provincial Hungarian life is maddening, compelling - and very funny ... exhilaratingly out of step with most contemporary fiction
Guardian
Baron is not bedtime reading: you need your wits about you ... This is a novel that demands much of its readers, and gives much in return. In an era glutted with fiction as vapid and insubstantial as a Krispy Kreme doughnut, Baron Wenckheim's Homecoming is the real Linzer torte.
The New Statesman
A mantra of fret, a strangely uplifting pessimism ... the Hungarian master has created perhaps his most accessible novel
Prospect
With an immense cast and wide-ranging erudition, this novel [is] the culmination of a Hungarian master's career
New Yorker
This vortex of a novel compares neatly with Dostoevsky and shows Krasznahorkai at the absolute summit of his decades-long project. Apocalyptic, visionary, and mad, it flies off the page and stays lodged intractably wherever it lands.
Publisher's Weekly starred review
Krasznahorkai constantly pushes beyond the expected, escalating everything to the brink of deliriousness
The New York Times Book Review
Astounding
Die Zeit
The contemporary Hungarian master of apocalypse who inspires comparison with Gogol and Melville
- Susan Sontag,