A haunting portrayal.–The Washington Post
Remarkable.–NPR
Extraordinary . . . A profoundly unsettling novel.–
The Times Literary Supplement (London)
The Fox Was Ever the Hunter is a collage of images, stories and fragments of forbidden songs. . . . When the collage is completed, the reader understands that each and every one of Müller's stories, every flight of luscious language and every brutal fact, has been necessary in depicting a society torn to pieces.–
The New York Times
Reads like poetry . . .
The Fox Was Ever the Hunter is a short book, but the way Müller narrates gives it a luminescence, like wet stone seen at night. . . . Of the writers to survive life under the Communist bloc, Müller has written most poignantly about the way surveillance and state control at once necessitated and warped the fabric of love. . . . From the moment she left, Müller has exercised her voice with a fury that vibrates off the page nearly a quarter century later. In this vividly poetic novel, she reminds us what life without that freedom looked, felt, and tasted like.–
Boston Globe
A dark collage, which glints with fear–and with beauty . . . Müller's prose–as poetic as it is blunt–works like a prism, shattering and illuminating a world that is always watching, waiting.–
The Atlantic
Perhaps no author has captured the surreal textures of Iron Curtain paranoia quite like Herta Müller.–Vogue.com (Best Books of the Month)
This newly translated 1992 novel set during the twilight of Romania's Ceau?escu regime makes vivid the persecution Müller and others suffered. . . . She uses the distinctive language honoured by the Nobel Committee for its 'concentration of poetry and the frankness of prose' to give a powerful sense of the toxic atmosphere of a totalitarian regime.–BBC Culture (UK)
Atmospheric, lyrical . . . An essential work of post-Iron Curtain literature and a harrowing portrait of life under suspicion.–
Kirkus Reviews (starred)
Offers a bleak and poetic portrait of Romanian village life in the final days of the Ceau?escu regime, where deprivation is ubiquitous, cruelty is standard, and spying is a survival skill. . . . Thickly lyrical and sometimes downright hallucinatory . . . few descriptions of life under totalitarian rule are as beautifully evocative.–
Booklist (starred)