"Henze's passionate reminiscences offer facet after bright facet of the kaleidoscope of modern culture. . . . He is eclectic, iconoclastic, never a slave to musical fashion and anything but boring. . . . Henze's writing is masterly, drenched in the same canny sense of drama that has marked his music. . . It is rare--very rare--to find a great composer who can write beautifully about his own music. Hans Werner Henze is such a composer and his Bohemian Fifths is a sweeping, moving portrait of the man, his art and his time."--Octavio Roca, San Francisco Chronicle
"Rich, informative and engaging. . . . [Henze] is an excellent memoirist and his book is full of vivid sketches of places and people. . . . Mr. Henze makes a convincing case for himself as a bad boy, self-destructive in love, anticonventional in his creative beliefs and belonging at heart in that demimonde of what he elsewhere describes as the Sodom and Gomorrah of war-wrecked Berlin. But as a composer, in public, he puts on his three-piece suit."--Paul Griffiths, Critic's Notebook, The New York Times
"What is compelling about this autobiography is its kaleidoscopic range, which includes both people and places. Henze's . . . memoirs have a candid flavor that makes them enormously readable."--Opera News
"Composers who can write about their work are rare enough. Fewer still can write enthrallingly. Hans Werner Henze can do both."--Badische Zeitung
"A universal cultural history in miniature, dazzlingly told, ruthlessly candid about himself and his works, with a constant undertow of irony and entertainingly informative in its detailed observations."--Nürnberger Nachrichten
"The descriptions are inspired and filled with genius."--Südkurier