Unhitched received a mixed reception from critics, several of whom, such as
James Kirchick, had been friends and colleagues of Hitchens. Gregory Shupak, writing for
In These Times, a left-wing magazine, argued that Seymour, with his "gift for reeling off an entire firing squad's worth of bullets in a single sentence" was also "plainly a caliber of intellectual that his subject is not." The review of
Unhitched in
The Daily Telegraph argued that the book's contentions were "all perfectly to the point", and that the book was "well-argued", but due to its orthodox left-wing perspective omitted some potentially interesting lines of inquiry such as the possible influence of Hitchens's youthful bisexuality on his depictions of Gulf War soldiers. The book was forcefully denounced by
Fred Inglis in
The Independent, however, as "sectarian and mean-spirited". Writing for
Newsweek, an article titled "A Nasty Piece of Work" by
James Kirchick described
Unhitched as a "tawdry new book" that, among other things, included unsubstantiated claims of plagiarism and unfounded personal attacks. Seymour responded by saying that Kirchick's review "was the most deliciously splenetic fanboy tribute to unreasoning hysteria that it has ever been my pleasure to gloat about" in a piece for his blog that was subsequently reposted by
Salon. Reviewing the book for the Irish magazine
Red Banner, writer
Kevin Higgins noted Seymour "lands many heavy punches" on Hitchens' reputation, and that "
Unhitched is well written, if a little verbose in places". Higgins agreed with some of Seymour's criticisms of Hitchens, arguing when Hitchens "was wrong, he was very, very wrong", singling out as an example Hitchens' defence of the
Bush administration's handling of the
Hurricane Katrina disaster. However, Higgins also took issue with Seymour using former members of the
Socialist Workers Party (UK) as sources, pointing out that though Seymour had left the SWP since he wrote
Unhitched, he had been "happy to quote as reliable witnesses people whose word he clearly...no longer accepts as gospel". Higgins also stated that Seymour was wrong to criticise Hitchens for not having a detailed political program, arguing Hitchens "was never a writer of manifestos" but rather an iconoclastic journalist. ==References==