"I literally felt undone reading Kim Magowan's Undoing. Though a work of fiction, the poet in me was left hanging at the edge of most lines. A beautiful book that felt like existing inside a dream for the pleasurable hours it took me to wind my way through the surreal treatment of relationships."
--Suzanne Burns, author of The Veneration of Monsters
"Burgeoning clouds of longing and desire cast shadows across the young characters in Kim Magowan's debut collection, darkening their features, leaving them exposed and illuminating their innermost identities in flashes of literary lightning. Alternatingly forlorn and hopeful, these jeweled stories bristle with transgression, seduction and the frissons of transcendent possibility."
--Adam Johnson, author of The Orphan Master's Son and Fortune Smiles
"Many of these delicate, thoughtful stories are devoted to unpacking the intricacies of infidelity in long-term relationships. Thought indeed takes up a lot of space here: The characters are prone to a level of analysis (of themselves, of their partners) that borders on obsession. The strongest of these slim narratives capture the claustrophobia of being caught in a disintegrating partnership in which two people have wrapped themselves around each other so tightly that neither one can move without causing the other pain. Ben, who is trying to conceal an affair from his wife, Miriam, thinks about Miriam, thinks about thinking about Miriam, and then thinks about the way that he thinks about how he thinks about Miriam. "He reflected, as he had frequently in recent weeks, upon the difficulty of assessing when his behavior was suspicious. There was too much latitude for suspicion, was the problem. Being cooperative and helpful was potentially suspicious, as was being romantic. But so was being brusque, distracted, critical or cranky. He felt like he was navigating some tricky video game, quicksand everywhere; then he questioned why this mental picture dressed itself as a video game, instead of some real (if still imaginary) bayou. Was Ben that severed from reality these days, that his fantasies packaged themselves in pixels?"
The way that these multiplying layers of consideration and interpretation can, in fact, move you further from the truth of a relationship is a theme that Magowan ably explores. But by the end of the nearly 30 individual stories in the collection, the cyclical returns to the same set of ideas start to feel repetitive rather than iterative. Thankfully, a handful of linked stories provide much-needed space for expansion, offering a sense of psychological movement rather than continual, stifling return."
--The New York Times, October 2018
"Kim Magowan is a fantastic writer--fearless, skillful, and sharply insightful--and Undoing is a tightly wound, lyrical, and morally complicated story collection that stayed with me long after I finished it. A deeply impressive collection of remarkable power."
--Molly Antopol, author of The UnAmericans
"As the relationships in Kim Magowan's Undoing break down, the stories wrap tighter and tighter. Melancholy cinches the collection, reshaping itself to surprise the reader at each turn."
--Jac Jemc, author of The Grip of It and My Only Wife