"[Huddle] succeeds in Not: A Trio with developing forcefully the still relevant theme of individual lives blazing their own trails in a world of conventional expectations and proscriptions. Throughout the book, Huddle is remarkably adept at fashioning his complex characters, creating an equally convincing psychological portrait of each as he or she interacts with others." —The Georgia Review
"Huddle provides glimpses of how discovery, recognition, and the unknown inextricably unite each of his characters. Not: A Trio treats its characters as gems do light." —Virginia Quarterly Review
"[Huddle] remains an accomplished observer of the pangs of middle age, of communities so tight they're nearly claustrophobic and of the strange turns love can take." —Publishers Weekly
"Small-town society in contemporary Vermont captured by one of the leading diagnosticians of life, love and social mores." —Notre Dame Review
"Huddle has always been masterful at plumbing the mysteries of the human heart, but this effort is particularly moving—and especially sharp. . . . His latest effort, Not, is at once beautiful and smart. The subject matter is vintage Huddle: The domestic minefields that even the most decent people consciously or unconsciously build around themselves. Set in Bennington and central Vermont, the three stories are told from the perspective of three linked adults, but all built to Claire McClelland's final understanding of who she is and what her life has meant. The voices—psychologist Claire McClelland, her late husband Ben, her lover Danny—are all carefully rendered and palpably real. Each is inviting and idiosyncratic, and a reader cannot help but care deeply for them all." —Chris Bohjalian
"David Huddle's new book is the best he's done, and that's saying a very great deal. It is wise and beautiful. In an age as stupid and ugly as ours, what could be more to our liking and our need?" —Hayden Carruth
"David Huddle's new work of fiction, Not: A Trio, focuses on the story of the most remarkable woman I have encountered in American fiction since Charles Frazier's Ada, in Cold Mountain. Although Mr. Huddle's Claire McClelland lives at the far northern end of the Appalachian Mountains from Frazier's people, she too eventually retreats to the wilderness to examine her life, particularly her relationships with men. The result is a compelling, original, and superb book by one of the very best fiction writers of our day." —Howard Frank Mosher
"Beautiful, substantial, and sophisticated in character and construction. Not is a stunning achievement, intertwining its three stories about absence into a single taut, haunting, psychological journey." —Kelly Cherry
"David Huddle has already established himself as one of our most gifted and productive masters of short fiction. Here, in the closely interrelated two short stories and novella that make up Not: A Trio, he has given us a virtuoso performance, a rich and layered story involving fully realized characters, a wonderful sense of place (Vermont), and a fugue of several distinct voices making a music all their own. This is a powerful, deeply moving work which enhances Huddle's reputation for literary excellence." —George Garrett