"The welcome paradox in How to be Alone is that the reader need not feel isolated at all. . ..This collection emphasizes [Franzen's] elegance, acumen and daring as an essayist, with an intellectually engaging self-awareness as formidable as Joan Didion's." –The New York Times
"Why be alone? For the pleasure of reading books such as this." –
Entertainment Weekly "Franzen critiques the alienating effects of postmodern America with just as much passion as he displays in his fiction. . .he cuts to the truth with razor-sharp precision. . . These essays offer a great reason to turn of the TV and spend the evening alone, lost in thought." –
Time Out New York "
How to be Alone reaffirms the novelist's prerogative to engage in social criticism. And Franzen's calm, passionate critical authority derives not from any special expertise in criminology, neurology or postal science, but rather from the fact that, as a novelist, he is principally concerned with the messy architecture of the self." –
The New York Times Book Review "There is here the eloquence and sensitivity and profound personal engagement that is only possible with the printed word–and, even then, only when it has no fear of being literature. Put Franzen among the living heroes of it." –
The Buffalo News