A steady oscillation between deliciously observed, ferociously strange fragments of consciousness and the social kabuki of the tragicomic teenage bildungsroman. . . . Clune has so elegantly set up a narrative playground where we can reasonably believe Nicholas is stumbling into Bach, Baudelaire, Camus and Wilde. Reading his experience of these raptures is invigorating and often hilarious . . . When we re really in Nicholas s mind, we never want to leave . . . The juice here is watching Clune s little cyclones of thought, vortical whooshes around art, drugs, sex and analysis . . . Like a great painter, Clune can show us the mind, the world, with just a few well-placed verbs . . . I could have read 300 pages of just this Nicholas looking out the window and describing what he saw and felt that I d gotten my money s worth. Kaveh Akbar, The New York Times Book Review
Pan is saturated with a grand, psychedelic spirit, the sort of holy mania one finds in writers like William Blake or Christopher Smart. . . . At once startlingly funny and radiantly . . . strange. . . . Charged with so much fearsome grandeur that even the book s micro-movements feel operatic. . . . Approachable and inviting but also wild enough to seem practically avant-garde. . . . For those who wonder if the American novel has anything new to offer . . . Pan is exhilarating, a pure joy and a sheer, nerve-curdling terror from end to end. Matthew Spektor, The Washington Post
Nick is a beguiling addition to the literary lineage of child mystics that descends from the stories of J. D. Salinger . . . [Pan] ought to be a breakout for Mr. Clune, who captures Nick s strobing visions with remarkable lucidity and excellent dry humor. . . . The child-mystic novel argues that maturation dulls us to elemental and overwhelming wonders. Pan is a reawakening. The Wall Street Journal
Pan is remarkable for the honesty of its treatment of both mental illness and adolescence . . . Clune is brilliant on the loss of control and exaggeration of terror that follows . . . when we close the book, we find ourselves in a larger world. The Guardian
Clune is a very good writer. He seems to have access to another realm of the mind. The New Yorker
Clune s luminous debut novel captures the angst of growing up in suburban America . . . What sets it apart is Clune s luminous prose, deadpan humor and ability to make his narrator s panic attacks, drug-taking and philosophising ( Where do thoughts come from? he wonders) so enthralling that his story is a revelation and never a retread . . . Pan is a strange and original novel that is grounded in the way Clune consistently does the most vital thing make the world new. Financial Times
Clune doesn t choose between what we might describe as the poetic and the novelistic, the mystic and the naturalistic, explanations of Nick s experience. When it comes to time and consciousness, Clune s perennial topics, visionary perception is perhaps just a deeper form of realism. The Boston Globe
Sometimes the plunge into the unknown is so deep that you get lost, but that s not such a bad thing. You just have to close your eyes and trust and it s easy to put your faith in Clune . . . Pan balances the wildly imaginative nature of childhood with the wisdom of adulthood . . . I find immense comfort in the fact that I m alive at the same time as the publication of Pan. Hobart Pulp
One of those rare, enduring finds . . . Pan is the literary equivalent of a benevolent acid trip, leaving all your mental furniture rearranged. . . . It seduces you into thinking like a child again. . . . By inhabiting Nick s panic so intimately, Clune has achieved a remarkable sleight of genre, threading realism s dull needle with a semi-magical thread . . . For a novel that seems to be riffing on Kant, it s impressive that Pan is as funny and conversational as it is. Clune is alive to the unintended hilarity of suburban teenagedom, not to mention neurosis itself. Jessi Jezewska Stevens, BookForum
A metaphysical horror story cloaked in the guise of a Künstlerroman, Pan is ultimately about the nature of subjectivity and the loneliness of living in the fortress of one s own, unruly mind . . . [Passages] glimpse at Augustine s splendor . . . [Clune] makes the unruly mind of a teenager the stuff of high art . . . Pan pries Nick s skull open. Beware of what s inside. Adam Wilson, The Nation
Nick s earnest attempts to make sense of his feelings amid the unrewarding Illinois exurbs give the novel its coiled, ruminative energy . . . [Clune gives] a long look at the parallels and the inseparability of Pan from panic, epiphany from apophenia, our brightly intangible inner worlds from the asphalt and cinderblocks, the mice and weeds, that we have to share. For that alone, Pan deserves to feel seen. Stephanie Burt, The Baffler
Stylish, strange, and spellbinding, Michael Clune s novel tells the story of a teenage boy who suffers his first panic attack and is sent down a dark rabbit hole of rock music, literature, and self-discovery or discovery of a self that might just be part Greek god. Clune s book is full of unexpected, odd turns, but is told with such skill that the reader like the story s hero himself is willing to forget what he knows and go along on a wild ride. Town & Country
Stunning . . . [A] wild ride of a debut novel. . . . Pan is remarkable for the honesty of its treatment of both mental illness and adolescence. . . . Clune is brilliant on the loss of control and exaggeration of terror that follows . . . When we close the book, we find ourselves in a larger world." The Observer (UK)
Clune is offering an original and strikingly contemporary metaphysics. There has been much talk recently of an end to the century of autofiction, and much corresponding demand for new literary forms that perhaps resurrect or mix-and-match elements of past traditions but also create something new for the present. That it s been done by a high-school-stoner novel riffing on Ancient Greece is hilarious and surprising, but perfect. Compact
Pan is hypnotic, eerie, and surprisingly affecting. Our Culture
Michael Clune s psychological fiction Pan . . . has literary circles buzzing . . . Rendered in dazzling prose, Clune s debut novel paints a luminous portrait of the unique psychosis that growing up in suburbia can foster. Bustle (Best New Books Summer 2025)
With prose as strange as it is hypnotizing, Pan will leave you breathless and wanting for more. Harper s Bazaar
A job of literature is to tackle existential anxieties, and Michael Clune s new novel PAN does exactly that . . . Clune s brilliance isn t in the obscure connections he draws, but in his uncanny ability to remind us how human we all are. BookPage
Funny and unconventional . . . a book one might do well to steal language and ideas from . . . Clune s language . . . is undeniably lovely and his ideas worth lingering over. Oxford Review of Books
Evocative and erudite . . . The narrative barrels toward a frightening and enigmatic ending. This staggering coming-of-age saga is tough to shake. Publishers Weekly (starred review)
[Pan] explodes the central dilemma of the panic attack what is real? and then, whether real or illusory, on what plane can I approach? and wraps it all up in a moving coming-of-age story. Literary Hub
Intriguingly complex . . . A sly and artful bildungsroman. Kirkus
Michael Clune writes lucid, shrewd, startling prose capable of laying bare pockets of human experience that might otherwise go without words. Pan proves his mesmeric ability to return our world and selves to us made strange and changed; there is no other writer like him. Maggie Nelson, New York Times bestselling author of The Argonauts, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award
A strange, vivid, and intense novel about the mystery of consciousness and the magic of childhood. Tao Lin, author of Taipei, a New York Times Book Review Editors' Choice
I steal language and ideas from Michael Clune. Ben Lerner, Pulitzer Prize-nominated author of The Topeka School; author of 10:04, one of the New York Times Best Books of the 21st Century
Brilliant . . . A mind-bending, psychologically bending, really thrilling, interesting book. Lauren Groff, New York Times bestselling author of Fates and Furies
A true original . . . A new Michael Clune book is a cause for celebration. Paul Murray, author of The Bee Sting
No one writes like Michael Clune. His uncanny ability to fuse the universal with the arcane breaks new ground for the bildungsroman in Pan, where he dexterously stacks up spinning plates until, before you know it, there s nothing left but changeling magic. I didn t want the book to end, and I m still trying to figure out how it transformed the inscrutable doom of adolescence into a symphonic odyssey with style to spare. Blake Butler, author of Molly
This strange anti-love child of Arthur Machen, Philip K. Dick, and William S. Burroughs infected my brain with odd humor, paranoia, and existential dread. Bursting with truly breathtaking prose, Pan is an ontological coming of age story for, well, the ages. Paul Tremblay, New York Times bestselling author of Horror Movie and A Head Full of Ghosts