Christopher Lehmann-Haupt of
The New York Times wrote that "[i]n his remarkable new novel," Findley "has mixed fact and fiction, actual people and invented ones, to produce a new and bizarre form of historical romance. Similar in mood to
D.M. Thomas's
The White Hotel and almost as boldly imagined,
Famous Last Words reflects on the catastrophe that is 20th-century history and raises further doubts about the possibility of surviving it." In
The Boston Phoenix,
John Domini felt that the novel was "overwritten in places and overindulgent of its idols; yet in its creation of Mauberley, and its investigation of that sensitive man’s entrapment in evil,
Famous Last Words carries forward essential work. It makes eloquent what had previously been numbed, accusatory, and silent." ==References==