[4] Writing for The New York Times Wendell Steavenson described how, "This extraordinary book carries a message, not of a trite and clichéd hope, but of a greater universal humanism, the terrifying idea that, ultimately, there are no special distinctions among us, that in fact we are all very much in the same boat.
"[5] Ron Charles of The Washington Post called the novel "riveting" and noted that, "Nothing I’ve read before has given me such a visceral sense of the grisly predicament confronted by millions of people expelled from their homes by conflict and climate change.
"[6] Similarly, Robert J. Wiersema writing for the magazine Quill & Quire said "What Strange Paradise is an immediate, visceral reading experience.
El Akkad offers no easy answers, save the reminder of our common humanity and the importance of the simplicity of right and wrong.
"[7] The Guardian's Sukhdev Sandhu specifically pointed to how "El Akkad’s vignettes of life at sea are especially textured.