Swados has a fine comic sense of our epoch's major poses and masquerades, and his work is armed with an exact contemporary wit whose targets are pretension, blindness, and non–life...But more than that he is concerned with the break–through into true feeling, the attainment of moral dignity and the linking up with others through compassion, and that is where his best achievement lies.
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Commonweal The deep feeling and giftedness of Harvey Swados shine through these stories...He stunningly captures time, place, and person.
– Studs Terkel
Harvey Swados was a writer who stood apart from the prevailing fashions of his time. As a novelist and short–story writer...he took the social unit–the family and the factory, the intellectual community and the unions, and the larger social mass from which they derived–as his special field of inquiry, and there were years at a time when he was virtually alone among the writers of his generation in lavishing his extraordinary empathy and intelligence on such subjects.
– Hilton Kramer,
The New York Times Book Review A stalwart literary craftsman of the realistic school, Swados wrote a number of novels, short stories and books of literary and political comment and then died, in his fifties, without ever attaining the critical acceptance, indeed acclaim, that he deserved.
– Margaret Manning,
The Boston Globe Swados's people are soldiers and lovers, runaway fathers, failed artists, innocents at home and abroad.
Nights in the Gardens of Brooklyn is that rarest sort of book – the necessary one.
– Brett Singer,
Los Angeles Times Book Review