Metacritic Books

Indecision
by Benjamin Kunkel

ISBN: 1400063450
Random House, 256 pages, $21.95
Fiction General Literature & Fiction
Released 08/30/2005

An unhappy 28-year-old tech support worker tries an experimental new prescription drug in an attempt to cure his chronic indecision in this comedic debut novel from Benjamin Kunkel.

Overall Metascore

This is an average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

69 / 100

Critic Reviews

Outstanding The New York Times Book Review Jay McInerney
Kunkel manages, just barely, to preserve the superb comic tone of the novel, even as he gestures, like some literary voice in the wilderness, toward a hazy new frontier of hip sincerity, of irony subordinated to a higher calling.
Outstanding Los Angeles Times Mark Rozzo
What often makes "Indecision" itself indecisive--those pointy- headed tangents on globalization, erotic transference and Teutonic philosophy--is precisely what makes this wise and clownish enterprise work so well. [18 Sep 2005, p.R10]
Outstanding New York Observer Anna Shapiro
I’d be happy to take [Dwight] on as a wavering on-again, off-again boyfriend... if I can’t have the guy, I’ll settle for the book. Decisively. [29 Aug 2005, p.18]
Favorable New York Review Of Books Joyce Carol Oates
Very likely, Kunkel intends his protagonist to be a satiric portrait at times, and at other times a sympathetic portrait, but it's an uneasy mix. The novel's unvarying tone is one of wry self-deprecation, lacking the detachment and savagery requisite for effective satire.
Favorable LA Weekly Claire Messud
Kunkel is clearly smart enough, and courageous enough as a writer, to go farther.
Favorable London Review Of Books Daniel Soar
[A] very serious and very funny novel.
Favorable The Guardian Todd McEwen
The charm and surprise of Indecision make it eminently worth reading. There are a few too many tired-sounding jokes and some straining for effect of the writing-school variety, but any lapses are made up for by fresh insights and observations, scathing and tender.
Favorable The Onion A.V. Club Scott Tobias
Rarely do novels so readily take the form of their protagonist: Behind that seemingly transparent veneer of slacker charm, the kid has some potential after all.
Favorable Village Voice Joy Press
Kunkel... manages to whip up a cerebral novel that doesn't feel overly, uh, cerebral.
Favorable Washington Post John McNally
Because he's young and uses big words, Kunkel may unfairly be compared to David Foster Wallace or Rick Moody, but unlike them he has succeeded in writing a novel that's clever without being self-conscious.
Favorable San Francisco Chronicle Oscar Villalon
Lounging among all of [the] slangy "dudes," "likes," "bust a moves" and "mans," and stepping gingerly around paragraphs strewn with explosive packets of wit, is a grown-up crowd of intriguing ideas.
Favorable Slate Michael Agger
Beneath all the wit, Indecision suffers, in its second half, from the kind of speechifying one might find in an [Ayn] Rand novel, and I wonder if their writerly aspirations are all that far apart.
Favorable The New York Times Michiko Kakutani
Old Dwight's book really knocked me out.
Favorable The Independent Nicholas Royle
Although happy endings cannot be taken for granted, the book delivers an uplifting message in dark times.
Favorable Daily Telegraph Christopher Cleave
It takes a rare courage to write a book about things that matter, and a great talent to make it lovable. This novel is an enjoyable, unflinching, deeply politically-engaged invitation to a happier world.
Mixed Daily Telegraph Sam Leith
Benjamin Kunkel has written a book much like its protagonist: diverting, clever, hapless, immature, confused, frequently funny and extremely genial. It leaves you with the impression that he probably has the equipment to write a first-rate novel; but that this isn't it.
Mixed Boston Globe Jay Atkinson
Kunkel's debut novel is a brief, witty, occasionally insightful but ultimately vapid take of a spoiled young man adrift in a world of privilege and comfort.
Mixed The New Yorker
The book, for all its crisp prose, can’t escape the staleness of its conceit.
Mixed The Independent Tim Martin
Despite occasional delights, Indecision remains more of a placebo than a wonder drug.
Unfavorable The Nation Mark Lotto
Benjamin Kunkel may become a serious novelist, but Indecision is not a serious novel.
Unfavorable Entertainment Weekly Gilbert Cruz
Benjamin Kunkel has succeeded in crafting a voice of singular originality--one that you want to punch in the mouth.

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