Hilarious . . . [ Moores] imagination swings into overdrive. He contemplates the sex lives of Klimt and Egon Schiele, writes pastiches derived from Frankenstein and the Freud-Jung correspondence, and even finds room to include a grating failed artist named Hitler. . . Plenty of fun to be had. Publishers Weekly
A brilliant amalgamation of history, literature, horror, humor and humanity, unfolding with page-turning energy, decorously infused with a delightful stream of ingeniously smutty, sweetly obscene words and situations. Petulama Argus-Courier
Outstanding. . . Anima Rising is another example of why we need both the humanities and the humanity of Moore. Washington Independent Review of Books
Moore offers an absurdist and sardonic sequel, of sorts, to Frankenstein. . . This is a wild adventure through history, art, and literature for Moores many fans and those who enjoy historical fiction with a side of fantasy and wry humor. Library Journal (starred review)
I sincerely doubt whether I will encounter another novel as sheerly enjoyable as Anima Rising over the rest of my reading days during 2025. . . Beneath its nonstop but never overdone gonzo humor (which would provoke envy among the Marx Brothers, Firesign Theatre and Monty Python) lies a real beating heart of empathy for all humanity, an unabashed sensibility that reserves and allocates a tender mercy for those innocent humans most afflicted by life. . . Anima Rising is a small masterpiece. Locus
Smart and funny and all sorts of raunchy in the best way. . . Dazzles, entertains and squeezes in more than a few laughs. . . Razzmatazz is another success for Christopher Moore. San Francisco Chronicle on Razzmatazz
Moore and his merry band of miscreants are firmly on the right side of historyand they will make you laugh until it hurts. BookPage (starred review) on Razzmatazz
It takes a certain amount of guts and wild abandon to recast a Shakespeare comedy as a hard-boiled detective story, but if anyone can pull it off, its master satirist Moore, whose gift for funny business apparently knows no bounds. . . . A welcome return of a fan-favorite character in a romp of a tale that will delight not only mystery buffs but also fantasy fanatics, and, of course, Bard lovers. Booklist (starred review) on Shakespeare for Squirrels