"Much of the novel is an expression of the intellectual and moral lost motion of the age . . . the special agony of the American Negro." --New York Times Book Review
"A fevered and impressionistic riff on the struggles of blacks in the urban North and rural South, as told through the prism of The Inferno. . . . Other writers addressed race more directly, but for all its linguistic slipperiness, Baraka's language conveys the feelings of...