"Like the best and rarest of historical fictions, it goes well beyond the limitations of its setting. . . . With its exploration of racial hatred and the possibilities of reconciliation, it reads like a distillation of our own troubling times." -
The Washington Post "A brilliant performance, the work of an accomplished novelist of peculiar energy and courage. . . . One puts down
Master of the Crossroads with a visceral knowledge of what it felt like to wage war in Haiti at the turn of the nineteenth-century." -
The New York Times Book Review "Fiction in the grandest, most ambitious form. . . . Often the prose swaggers muscularly, reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy in the Border Trilogy; at other times it grows florid and surreal, in the vein of Gabriel Garcia Marquez." -
The Boston Globe "Bell has taught historians a thing or two about what it means to have an intimate relationship with the past. Throwing caution to the wind, he has taken up a little-known but hugely important subject with passion and conviction." -
Los Angeles Times "A stunning achievement: marvelously crafted, meticulous in its historical detail, magnificent in its sweep." –
The Seattle Times "[A] rich novel. . . . Its huge tapestry of scenes on battlefields and plantations, in ranches and churches, vibrantly reanimates Bell's cast of real and fictional characters. . . . [Toussaint] is now one of the great characters in modern literature." –
San Francisco Chronicle "An absorbing and . . . majestic read. . . . [Bell] could not have chosen a more resonant setting than Haiti, nor found a more telling figure in whom to summon contemporary hopes and fears." –
Chicago Tribune "This meticulously researched novel has the feel of a tableau by Delacroix: a generous swirl of individual and collective fervor." –
The New Yorker "A fascinating tale. . . . Bell rides his near-perfect prose style through the terrain of the human psyche with astonishing ease." –
The Philadelphia Inquirer "Bell has learned well the lessons of [Tolstoy]. . . . [The] human drama of families, lovers and individual quests for self-knowledge envelops the reader in a brilliant blend of history and fiction." –
The Portland Oregonian "Atmospheric, well-researched, and well-written. . . . The unfolding of Haitian history is a fascinating tale, and Bell tells it with great skill." –
The Pittsburgh Post Gazette "Provides a history lesson that tells us much about our present and, perhaps, constitutes a warning for our future." –
The Miami Herald "Read this novel to get a feel of life and death in the midst of one of the New World's major political and military uprisings . . . in this trilogy we find the talented Madison Smartt Bell at the crossroads of his career." –
The Dallas Morning News