"And in their sheer absurdity
Nothing and
Doting are two of the funniest novels ever written, bringing to an almost abstract essence the humor that had always been woven through Green's work." –Brooke Allen,
The Atlantic "Henry Green is an accomplished virtuoso, and he makes his upper-middle-class Londoners perform like figures in some highly stylized ritual dance of a dying culture.
Nothing is a brilliant performance." –
The Nation "His sentences sometimes unwind in long, gossamer strands of prepositions and subordinate clauses, as tenuous as a spider's web. . . . For fellow writers who chafe against the limits of language, there's a special thrill in following Green across the page to see if his sentence will survive in one piece." –Danny Heitman,
The Weekly Standard "
Nothing and
Doting...actually display something close to old-fashioned formal perfection." –Charles McGrath,
The New York Times Book Review
"The sincere and almost religious conviction of the primacy of guilt in human relations is one of Green's most fruitful sources of inspiration, and he forcefully develops it in
Doting and
Nothing, his last, great, and dismally underrated novels." –
The New Criterion