Art Spiegelman Press Reviews
It can be easy to forget how much of a game-changer Maus was. - Washington Post
Reading [his work] has been an amazing lesson in storytelling - Etgar Keret
Spiegelman's Maus changed comics forever. Comics now can be about anything -- Alison Bechdel
Maus is a masterpiece, and it's in the nature of such things to generate mysteries, and pose more questions than they answer. But if the notion of a canon means anything, Maus is there at the heart of it. Like all great stories, it tells us more about ourselves than we could ever suspect -- Philip Pullman
A remarkable work, awesome in its conception and execution... at one and the same time a novel, a documentary, a memoir, and a comic book. Brilliant, just brilliant -- Jules Feiffer
All too infrequently, a book comes along that' s as daring as it is acclaimed. Art Spiegelman's Maus is just such a book - Esquire
A quiet triumph, moving and simple - impossible to describe accurately, and impossible to achieve in any medium but comics - Washington Post
The Pulitzer Prize-winning Maus tells the story of Vladek Spiegelman, a Jewish survivor of Hitler's Europe, and his son, a cartoonist coming to terms with his father's story. Maus approaches the unspeakable through the diminutive. Its form, the cartoon (the Nazis are cats, the Jews mice), shocks us out of any lingering sense of familiarity and succeeds in 'drawing us closer to the bleak heart of the Holocaust' - New York Times
A remarkable feat of documentary detail and novelistic vividness...an unfolding literary event - New York Times Book Review
Maus is a book that cannot be put down, truly, even to sleep...when you finish Maus, you are unhappy to have left that magical world and long for the sequel that will return you to it -- Umberto Eco The most affecting and successful narrative ever done about the Holocaust - Wall Street Journal
An epic story told in tiny pictures - New York Times
Spiegelman has turned the exuberant fantasy of comics inside out by giving us the most incredible fantasy in comics' history: something that actually occurred. Maus is terrifying not for its brutality, but for its tenderness and guilt - New Yorker
In the tradition of Aesop and Orwell, it serves to shock and impart powerful resonance to a well-documented subject. The artwork is so accomplished, forceful and moving - TimeOut
A brutally moving work of art - Boston Globe
One of the cliches about the Holocaust is that you can't imagine it - Spiegelman disproves this theory - Independent
The first masterpiece in comic book history - New Yorker