Chase, however, in World Literature Today, finds this 'unusual and disturbing' collection to be 'characteristic' of Atwood's literary work. its form' because Atwood 'dispenses with the plot line that usually provides the skeleton for her fiction.' Kathy Mezei, writing in West Coast Review, comments that in this collection Atwood is 'pointedly not writing her usual cryptic poems or ironic novels she is making notations of experiences, feeling, or the act of writing.' K.
As Elspeth Cameron points out in the book Saturday Night, Murder in the Dark was 'dramatically new. 'Happy Endings' first appears in Atwood's 1983 collection, Murder in the Dark: Short Fiction and Prose Poems.