"A small miracle . . . I Who Have Never Known Men is about as heavyhearted as fiction can get."--New York Times
"Mesmerizing. . . . The book's austere mystery--the atrophied and gelid world it depicts--provides a richly allusive consideration of human life."--Deborah Eisenberg, New York Review of Books
"A consistently gripping experience."―TLS
"Like Kafka with a dash of Ursula Le Guin, this story is part mystery, part science fiction, and all literature."--Booklist
"Immediately reminiscent of Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale."--Kirkus Reviews
"Evocative and thrilling, it's a dystopian modern classic."--Dua Lipa's Service95 Book Club
"Harpman says here all there is to say about dignity and the difficulty of remaining human in the face of suffering."--Le Quotidien
"It is surprising that a book with the psychological detail of a nightmare elicits in the reader feelings of such profound intensity."--Le Monde
"The delirium of I Who Have Never Known Men suggests the work of a feminine Kafka."--Le Nouvel Observateur
"[A] riveting narrative. . . . Carefully crafted, this novel is both unusual and thought-provoking."--Library Journal
"Unlike other science fiction or fantasy novels, this is a universe without an invented order: there is no known infrastructure, no reveal, no men hiding behind a curtain. It is the simplicity of the writing that makes my skin crawl, so eerie in its absences."--Haley Mlotek, Frieze
"[An] eerily evocative novel . . . this intriguingly dark thought experiment told by a compellingly alien voice--dispassionate and unfussy--is strangely fascinating."--Lucy Scholes, The Times
"A vivid evocation of another world, alive with hope and dignity in the midst of cruelty and alienation. . . . A haunting testimony from an abandoned planet."--Megan Hunter, author of The End We Start From