Rushdie s towering talent is evident throughout The Eleventh Hour, his fiction blends the real with the fable-like. No Anglophone writer does it better . . . The prose here is Rushdie at his supple best, restrained yet daring . . . There s a twist in this piece, Late, that underscores Rushdie s wizardry on the page. While diverse in technique, each story in The Eleventh Hour springs from a common argument: Language, whether spoken or read or imagined, transforms us all. The Minnesota Star Tribune
Meticulously constructed . . . Rushdie has hundreds of imitators, in multiple languages, but no equals. The Times Literary Supplement
These are stories of old men approaching the end, or already past its threshold, gracefully told by a writer who has edged near enough to it himself. The New Statesman
Best of all is The Musician of Kahani which could have been crafted into a satisfying novel . . . Perhaps this is his goodbye, or perhaps and preferably he s clearing the decks for something new. The Irish Independent
The famed writer delivers a brilliant series of intimations of mortality. . . . A provocative set of tales that, though with grim moments, celebrate life, language, and love in the face of death. Kirkus Reviews, starred review
Rushdie returns in full transfixing force . . . The evocative title, cuing us to a sense of urgency, is a unifying vision for these five tectonic tales and a gauge of Rushdie's astute perception of our current dire predicament . . . exquisitely sensitive . . . Rushdie s spectacularly imaginative eleventh-hour cautionary tales are enthralling, sagacious, and resounding. Booklist, starred review
Rushdie follows his memoir Knife with a marvelous story collection focused on themes of legacy and death. . . . Grounded in moving ruminations on the afterlife and what a person leaves behind, these stories sing. Publishers Weekly, starred review
At 78, Rushdie is still publishing impactful work; we can all doff our hats to one of the most important voices in contemporary literature. Independent
An inventive and engrossing collection of stories which, though death-tinged, are never doom-laden. With luck this master writer has more tales to tell. Los Angeles Times
Rushdie really needs no introduction, but let s just say that a musing on life and what we leave behind is well worth picking up when it comes from an author who has himself survived several assassination attempts, was knighted for his contributions to literature, and is a foremost master of magical realism. CULTURED magazine