From the
Boston Phoenix: ''The title heroa Western legend,
Civil War Veteran, and Wild West Show starhas, like
Billy Pilgrim in
Kurt Vonnegut's
Slaughterhouse Five become unstuck in time. Also like Pilgrim, who was forever traumatized by the Allied bombing of Dresden during World War II, at the heart of Watt's chronological peregrinations is a tragic historical event, in his case the 1863 New York City
Draft Riots during which uncounted African-Americans were lynched.'' ''Love also plays a major part in Watt's tale: he's lost his heart to Lucy Billings, a beautiful firebrand and fighter for justice who unfortunately has taken up with someone whose revolutionary commitment is greater than his own. But there are other amorous solaces with which he passes the time, or times; like Emelina, a bawdy barmaid and apparently immortal revenant.'' ''So you could say there's a lot going on in this teeming tome, including cameos by
Oscar Wilde and
J.P. Morgan, the latter of whom is responsible for one of Watt's grimmer misadventures when he has the redoubtable cowpoke tossed into the
Wyoming Territorial Prison in
Laramie on a bogus murder charge.'' ==Literary significance & criticism==