One of the Best Books of the Year: San Francisco Chronicle
Wondrous. . . . Mesmerizing. . . . Develops lives that are rich, mysterious and constantly changing. The Washington Post
Dickensian in its breadth and detail. . . . Smiley is simply brilliant. Minneapolis Star Tribune
Heartbreaking. . . . Expansive yet intimate. The New York Times Book Review
Superb. . . . [A] king-size American quilt of a novel. The New Yorker
Wonderful. . . . Smiley poses large questions and offers powerful insights. San Francisco Chronicle
Recalls Balzac s Human Comedy, John Dos Passos U. S. A. trilogy and John Updike s Rabbit quartet. . . . Leave[s] us looking forward to the finale of this epic endeavor. NPR
Smiley s brilliance is twofold. In telling the story of an American family, she unfurls the troubled trajectory of twentieth-century America. USA Today
Eloquent and poignant. . . . Smiley s deft narrative hopping is as impressive as ever. Entertainment Weekly
The second installment of Smiley s Last Hundred Years trilogy follows the next generation of Langdons across a mid-twentieth century American panorama, evoking with perceptiveness and sweep the social revolutions that realign their fates. Vogue
Engrossing. . . . Smiley captures the great heartland diaspora of the twentieth century. . . . Demonstrates what a novel, unique among all art forms, can do. The Dallas Morning News
Phenomenally powerful. . . . What Smiley feels most like here, for her faultless skill in bringing a wide cast so vividly into being that we would know them anywhere, for the remarkable intensity of her feeling for territory and landscape and her combination of impatient intellect, emotional perspicacity and unfailing humanity, is America s Tolstoy. The Guardian (London)
The real magic of this novel is that which makes every Jane Smiley book a work of art, recognizably hers: the writing, the writing, the writing. Los Angeles Review of Books
[An] intimate and exceptional exploration of American history through the eyes of an Iowa family. . . . Elegantly tuck[s] a busy century into three volumes full of life, humor and sharp observation. The Miami Herald
Masterful. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Nuanced and intimate. . . . Capture[s] the feel and aesthetic of an American family. You meet the Langdons in Some Luck, but by the time you finish Early Warning, you ll feel like you are one of them. Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Smiley is a master of characterization as well as language. . . . Images are so clear it s hard to believe you re not in the story yourself, and people are so well drawn you d swear you know them personally. The New York Journal of Books
Utterly engaging. . . . Early Warning is a masterpiece of quick and perfectly executed brushstrokes. The Independent (London)