Finalist for the 2012 - 26th Annual Translation Prize in Nonfiction, French-American Foundation & Florence Gould Foundation "Manhunts is an unusual and stimulating essay... The strength of the book lies in its refusal to treat manhunting as a metaphor. Chamayou instead focuses on the concrete violence of predation, tracking, banishment, captivity, confinement, and the murderousness that goes along with them."--Jean Berard, Books and Ideas "Easily accessible despite being packed with multi-facetted philosophical discussions and layers of archival treasures... I read the book in what seemed like a single, long, fascinated breath."--Gitte du Plessis, Theory & Event
"From manhunting for sport in the Occident to the global search for 'illegal aliens' in the twenty-first century, this book offers a history of humans' preying on other human beings. Applying the rubric of hunting to contemporary debates about illegal migrants, Chamayou shows that the supposedly newest hunt refreshes an old motif. A provocative take on a topic of great currency."—Jimmy Casas Klausen, University of Wisconsin-Madison