"It is one thing to be informed by Shakespeare that life "is a tale told
by an idiot signifying nothing"; it is something else to encounter the
idea literally presented in a novel by Samuel Beckett. But I am
reasonably certain that a sensitive reader who journeys through How It
Is will leave the book convinced that Beckett says more that is relevant
to experience in our time than Shakespeare does in Macbeth. It should
come as no surprise if a decade or so hence How It Is is appraised as a
masterpiece of modern literature. This poetic novel is Beckett at his
height." -- Webster Schott
"A wonderful book, written in the sparest prose. . . . Beckett is one of
the rare creative minds in our times." -- Alan Pryce-Jones
"What is novel is the absolute sureness of design. . . built phrase by
phrase into a beautifully and tightly wrought structure -- a few dozen
expressions permuted with deliberate redundancy accumulate meaning even
as they are emptied of it, and offer themselves as points of radiation
in a strange web of utter illusion." -- Hugh Kenner