"This is one of the best collections of essays I have seen in some time. The authors manage to make strong cases for the link between Beckett and political questions even as they provide important bridges between experimental fictions in general and political consciousness. For too long it has been assumed that experimental literature by definition must be antipolitical, and in highly political times like our own, this can only serve to further diminish the importance of work that is in so many ways clearly the best that has been done in the past fifty years. This book goes a long way toward redressing this situation and reclaiming an important place for experimental fiction that includes an inevitable political function as well. This topic is central to Beckett studies, to the question of modern and contemporary fiction, and to the larger theoretical issues that such fiction inevitably involves." -- James S. Hans, author of Contextual Authority and Aesthetic Truth
"Each author provides either an explicit or an implied sense of the political. This breadth extends Beckett scholarship as well as considerations of the political as the term is used among literary and cultural theorists." -- Steven Ungar, coeditor of Identity Papers: Contested Nationhood in Twentieth-Century France