Praise For This Book
"Undone is an addictive book." New Pop Lit
New Yorker staffer Colapinto’s novel (after About the Author) is an over-the-top, irreverent, and darkly comical thriller
Colapinto’s novel oscillates between highly ironic and deeply earnest treatments of this taboo subject matter. The story tackles sexual and moral dilemmas that are worth contemplating, delivering them at a breakneck and often entertaining pace.”Publishers Weekly
Cannily over the top in its comic depravity and magnetizing in its sympathy, Colapinto’s battle royale of innocence and evil, blindness and illumination, betrayal and love will thrill those who enjoy subversively erotic and suspenseful fiction of the finest execution and most cutting implications.” Booklist Starred Review
[Colapinto’s] pacing is expert
A well-machined page-turner that brings some smarts to a touchy subject.” Kirkus
Undone is one of the most profoundly disturbing novels you'll ever read there's not a taboo John Colapinto isn't willing to skewer but it's also one of the most entertaining. Equal parts thriller and deft satire, Undone will make you laugh while you cringe and leave you asking questions about the very culture that created it.” Tod Goldberg, author of Gangsterland
"Wicked, sexy, funny, ghastly, tragic, and, oh, did I say very funny. The dialogue is good and so is the narrative, intelligent and witty. A terrific read." Michael Lindsay-Hogg, author of Luck and Circumstance
Undone casts a very specific spell: It enthralls and horrifies simultaneously... it’s a pseudo-incestuous thriller, a noir that, like Francine Prose’s Blue Angel and Philip Roth’s American Pastoral, details the unraveling of the moral American man and his world
The inevitable disaster exerts a magnetizing force, drawing the reader forward at hurtling speeds to an intolerable climax. Our own urgency and hunger for the story is upsetting perhaps precisely because it mimics the hero’s troubling lust.” The Globe and Mail
"You might call Undone a Lolita for the DNA-age
. Colapinto revels conspicuously in words and language. His sprightly third-person narrator rambles garrulously, as if extemporizing an obscure fable. Put the book down and it’s easy to imagine him still chatting away inside the covers
Undone stretches credulity like taffy, mostly because it can: the dominant mood here is social and psychological satire, not realism. Colapinto exploits it all brilliantly, taking considerable risks along the way." Emily Donaldson, The Toronto Star
"As impolite a book as you’re likely to read
Undone is a novel about envy and the ways in which it corrodes and corrupts." Mark Medley, The Globe and Mail
In his arresting novel, John Colapinto fearlessly explores the troubled terrain that lies between desire and cruelty, fidelity and temptation, and crime and punishment. Equal parts mystery, social satire, and philosophical rumination, Undone asks What drives a good man to act badly?’” Rachel Giese, journalist
Vivacious is an adjective often reserved for women, but Undone is that unusual hybrid a vivaciously male novel. Colapinto targets the bloodless male literary characters of the 21st century as his story profanely embodies the great roles orphans, protectors, invalids, lechers, predatorsand tosses literary themes in the air like so many spinning crystals. Colapinto, who is astutely brilliant at animating people on the pages of The New Yorker, refracts modern morality hubris, loss, good, evil, lust, revengeto give us a spicy take full of verve, vim, and villainy.” Claudia Casper, author of The Reconstruction
John Colapinto has written a wicked and sharp-edged novel that cuts deep into both contemporary media culture and the uncontrollable embarrassment that is male sexual desire.” Russell Smith, author of Girl Crazy
Though it takes its best cues from the traditional mystery novel, it is also a satire shot through with unexpected, touching sincerity. The characters are daft, sweet, disgusting, outrageous, heartrendingly admirable, annoying and oddly true. I read the story thinking This could never happen!’ knowing full well that, in the morally conservative, sexual crime-obsessed America of today, it actually could happen.” Karen Connelly, author of The Lizard Cage