You can dip in at any point, and be carried along as in a lively cafe conversation – that is, if your friend happens to be a polymath with seemingly all of European literature (in the original languages), as well as Vedic writings, in his head, but whose flow of associations leaves you feeling not out of your depth, but smarter and better read . . . Calasso is especially good at describing the characters of myth and legend with a novelist's omniscient authority. –A.E. Stallings, The New York Times Book Review
There are two kinds of knowledge, he insists, scientific and mythological - and while he doffs the fedora occasionally to the former, it's the latter that has made his life worth living and his books worth reading, especially when, as in this latest book, he narrates some captivating passages about divine slap and tickle . . . all infused with the enviable learning of Calasso, whose favoured mode is incontrovertible assertion, sweetened with some lovely poetic passages . . . Calasso is vital. –
Stuart Jeffries, The Guardian [Calasso] is a spellbinding modern magus who might almost have been invented by his fellow-Milanese, Umberto Eco . . . At best, he writes like a poet, not a professor, in glinting, enigmatic nuggets of narrative finely voiced by his translator Richard Dixon. At a moment when atavistic kinds of peril, awe and terror seem close at hand, it feels no great stretch to share Calasso's core belief that 'The gods always return.'–
Boyd Tonkin, Financial Times Calasso is elliptical, allusive and dazzlingly eclectic . . .
The Celestial Hunter is 'an initiation through the book', speculative but capable of changing how you see things. –
Dominic Green, The Spectator "Thought-provoking . . . [
The Celestial Hunter] is laced with aphorisms and bold declarations, but its real strength lies in Calasso's great facility with languages . . . [It] will provide historians with much entertaining speculation on the story of humankind." –
Publishers Weekly