"A stunner . . . Johnson's sentences are always brilliant, but it is in the interstices, the gray areas of the story, that he really excels." –Los Angeles Times
"A thriller of spies and black marketeers that's hard to put down for all the right reasons." –
New York Magazine "America's most incandescent novelist." –
John Lingan, Slate "The single catastrophe is what fuels that demands and mysteries of literature. The wreckage is what essential writers particularize, and Denis Johnson's interests have always beenin wreckage, both individual and universal. If
Train Dreams (a Pulitizer finalist) dealt with the dignified tragedy of a past American antonym,
The Laughing Monsters addresses the vanishing present, a giddy trickle-down of global exploitation and hubris–the farcical exploits of cold dudes in a hard land." –
Joy Williams, The New York Times Book Review "It would be hard to find a better American writer, at the level of the sentence, than Johnson." –
Gina Frangello, Boston Globe "Easy to love line by line–Denis Johnson's prose, as always, is incandescent . . . [a] hermetic, exhilirating, visionary nightmare of a book." –
Justin Taylor, Bookforum "National Book Award winner Denis Johnson has brilliantly plumbed the mystical and the macabre in such works as
Tree of Smoke and his instant classic
Jesus' Son.
The Laughing Monsters delivers a more commercial, post-9/11 tale of intrigue, deception, romance, and misadventure set in West Africa without losing Johnson's essentially poetic drive . . . With each twist, Johnson deftly ups the stakes while adding to the cavalcade of entrepreneurs, assassins, seers, and smugglers that populate the book, tuning us in to the roiling political realities and cultural complexities of Africa today . . ." –
Lisa Shea, Elle "An adventure without any expected twists. Mr. Johnson is adept at keeping the pace of the story up without sacrificing either suspense or satisfaction . . . The mystery is worth trying to solve." –
Mona Moraru, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette "And for his next trick, Johnson delivers a taut, Conrad-by-way-of-Chandler tale about a spy who gets too close to the man he's shadowing in Africa . . . As in any good double-agent story, Johnson obscures whose side Roland is really on, and Roland himself hardly knows the answer either: Befogged by frustrations and bureaucracy, his lust for Davidia and simple greed, he slips deeper into violence and disconnection. Johnson expertly maintains the heart-of-darkness mood . . . his antihero's story is an intriguing metaphor for [post-9/11 lawlessness]." –
Kirkus