Reviews were generally positive.
The Spectator commented in their review... The conversations with
Scooby-Doo, the made-up characters, the sex, lies and videotape – this is a landscape contoured, almost in whole, by Self’s imagination… It is, as always, a place crammed with a Devil’s Dictionary’s worth of wordplay, and with an unerring tendency towards the absurd. Scotland on Sunday went further, commenting that Self had finally found his place as an author... The most successful book he has written, and it establishes, perhaps, what kind of writer Self actually is: a modern-day
Jonathan Swift. He has the
satirist’s interest in exaggeration, distortion, snarling anger and linguistic verve, but more seriously, he is serious. There is a deeply moral core to Walking To Hollywood, and a raw emotional quality his previous fictions may have repressed or sublimated. ==References==