“A short but astonishing account, articulated in such calm, quiet prose that it makes the burning cruelty of what Bhutto experienced all the more harrowing. Coco still features prominently. But mostly the book is a necessary reminder that being “strong”, accomplished, widely admired and fiercely clever doesn’t offer a protective shield. Frankly, none of these qualities offers a woman immunity from the psychological violence of a coercively controlling man.”—The Guardian--------------------------------------
"A memoir about one of my favorite things in the world: dogs. Technically this book is about just one dog, the little Jack Russell terrier that became Bhutto’s closest companion during one of the most difficult times of her life. It’s in the company of this loyal dog that Bhutto is finally able to examine some of her most profound personal tragedies and the complex relationships that have shaped her life…a far-ranging memoir about motherhood, art, family, and the way that a dog’s unconditional love can offer a rare opportunity for healing.”—Literary Hub--------------------------------------
“[Bhutto] weighs wolves and humans in the balance and finds humans wanting, with wolves and their descendants, our beloved dogs, helping her find a path to personal freedom and even, now, happiness…[an] ultimately winning blend of natural history and fraught personal memoir.”—Kirkus Reviews--------------------------------------
“Bhutto’s meditative true story explores grief, loss, and healing within a melodic flow that shifts between the past, the lockdown, and the intervening years….With glimpses of hope throughout, Bhutto’s latest is reminiscent of Safiya Sinclair’s How To Say Babylon. Readers will root for her journey to happiness.”—Library Journal--------------------------------------
“A kaleidoscopic memoir of finding oneself after the harsh aftermath of a manipulative relationship while still navigating the long tail of grief after the death of Fatima’s father. …A heartbreaking and hopeful read to navigate loss, questioning motherhood, resilience, healing, and a desire for family through art, literature, cinema, nature, and friendship.”—Electric Literature--------------------------------------
“With searing honesty, Fatima Bhutto explores the quiet devastations of love, and what happens when we wait for a change that never comes. I saw myself in this story and I know many others will too.”
—Rupi Kaur, New York Times bestselling author of Milk and Honey--------------------------------------
“In The Hour of the Wolf, Fatima Bhutto asks the important questions: How to love well, wholly, how to be present for the self as a body in history, as a receptive system alongside other receptive systems? How does one become whole amidst smothering coercive control, political and domestic? How do we survive private grief amidst public joy, private joy amidst public grief? Toward the end of the book, Bhutto whispers the azan into the ears of a litter of newborn puppies, and it feels like a miniature climax of the psychospiritual maturation she charts throughout the book; only wilding through hell does one emerge with such unapologetic tenderness, earnest regard, such knowledge beneath what we call knowledge. I will love Coco (and Lama, and the other canine sages in this book) forever. I am an ardent student of Bhutto's vision.”
—Kaveh Akbar, author of Martyr!--------------------------------------
“The Hour of the Wolf tells the story of Fatima Bhutto’s extraordinary education in being tested—by life, by the need for love, by the fear of it, too, and by the horrors of war and contemporary political violence. And beside her, through it all, is the dog who taught her how to reach for something 'greater than grief'. Erudite and deeply moving, a memoir that is also the song you sing to make yourself brave.”
—Alexander Chee, author of How to Write an Autobiographical Novel--------------------------------------
“With otherworldly tenderness and the help of her Jack Russell terrier, Fatima Bhutto moves on from a cruel romance. In the breathtaking The Hour of the Wolf, we see her learning to connect to the natural world and her own desires, proving to herself that love has the power to drive away fear.”
—Ada Calhoun, author of Also a Poet--------------------------------------
“By the end of this short and enriching book, I felt somehow that I had lived the experiences Fatima Bhutto describes. Viscerally immediate and profoundly thoughtful, The Hour of the Wolf is both an engrossing narrative of love and cruelty, and a series of deft meditations on what it means to live among other creatures, human and non-human.”
—Mark O’Connell, author of To Be a Machine--------------------------------------
“The Hour of the Wolf is Fatima Bhutto’s most powerful book yet, written with unflinching honesty and deep intellectual curiosity. It is a quietly remarkable work from one of our most searching writers. Prepare to be undone.”
—Sonia Faleiro, author of The Good Girls--------------------------------------
“A tender and exquisite story of love held in the safekeeping of a dog's vast heart.”
—Jay Griffiths, author of How Animals Heal Us--------------------------------------
“As the memoir progresses, it becomes less about a woman trapped in an abusive relationship and more about a relationship between a woman and a dog – and, more broadly, a meditation on the healing, almost sacred connective bonds that can form between humans and animals… Coco and her puppies, in the end, led Bhutto away from the man, a true destroyer, toward some kind of light.”—Brooke Allen, The Spectator