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Unhitched
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Blistering and timely interrogation of the politics and motives of an infamous ex-leftist

About the Author

Richard Seymour is a writer, broadcaster and socialist, currently based in London. He writes regularly for the Guardian, the London Review of Books, Jacobin and many other publications.

Reviews

Clever, incisive ... Unhitched offers a more thorough and in-depth discrediting of Hitchens than anything previously published. And in doing so, Seymour has made an important contribution to understanding the political role of the intellectual celebrity in our time.
*In These Times*

Richard Seymour's Unhitched, a slim and scathing denunciation of turncoat scoundrel Christopher Hitchens, is a thoroughly satisfying and politically important book by one of the few remaining great radical left journalists.
*Rabble*

Seymour reveals Hitchens as having had a lifelong admiration both for the United States and for empires as civilizing forces.
*Washington Post Book World*

Richard Seymour employs a unique technique to shred Hitchens's political philosophy to pieces: Seymour puts the late writer on trial.
*The Christian Science Monitor*

Well-argued ... I think Seymour rather pitied Hitchens, as the married man pities the philanderer.
*Daily Telegraph*

He is not worthy of changing Christopher Hitchens's printer cartridge.
*The Times*

A nasty piece of work ... (Full disclosure: Hitchens was a friend, mentor, and neighbor of mine.)
*Newsweek*

Seymour's book offers an exciting counterbalance to the often uncritical praise that has flowed heavily since Hitchens was diagnosed with esophageal cancer in June 2010.
*Truthdig*

Seymour is certainly master of the records; he knows the work closely and cites it scrupulously. But his headlong, foam-flecked interpretation, voiced in a manner recklessly close to Hitchens's own but without the grace, the wit, the tearing high spirits and the faultless ear for the fall of a cadence of his great original, becomes merely tedious, repetitive and unconvincing ... This little book is 134 pages long. The author shouldn't have done it. It is paltry and it is trivially abusive. Its subject was as eloquent, cultivated, exuberant, unstoppable, sheerly gigantic a journalist as British or American politics has known since George Orwell.
*Independent*

Caustic demolition of Hitchens-not dissimilar to Hitch's way with Mother Teresa or the Clintons.
*The Big Issue In The North*

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