"This collection of 25 short stories highlights the ethnic diversity of California's Great Central Valley. Haslam portrays Hispanics, Armenians, Italians, and Native Americans as well as priests, unemployed Vietnam vets, and impoverished farmers. The characters are nearly all poor, nearly all undereducated, and nearly all male—though not all stereotypical. Haslam, who has published several other collections of short stories, from Okies (1973) to That Constant Coyote (1990), has a gritty yet reflective appreciation for the land and for its often zany inhabitants." —Mary Margaret Benson, Linfield College Library, Library Journal
"I don't know what I love best about Gerald Haslam's writing: the validation of his own turf, his marvelous sense of history and metaphor, or his zany and poignant characters. All these come together in Condor Dreams . . ." —Julie Robertson, Western American Literature
"The stories in Condor Dreams are told with such attention to individual distinctions of dialect, education, and culture that the stories feel like they are told from the characters themselves, as though Haslam has compiled oral narratives for an anthology. His talent for language and for weaving these stories together allows Condor Dreams to come across as a unified work, a patchwork quilt of the American landscape." —Brad Lucas, Southwestern American Literature, Spring 1995