“In Yarbrough’s intricate and satisfying novel (after The Realm of Last Chances), the lives of two ordinary men intersect during one winter night in Poland. . . The story tracks Bogdan and Richard through the following years, revealing how both come to grips with that night, grapple with their senses of self, and cope with the repercussions of long-held guilt. Yarbrough crafts intriguing subplots involving a murder investigation and property crime, set against a backdrop of 2016 politics. Though the prose is straightforward, the characters are compelling and the narrative steers clear of easy moralizing or predictable endings.” Publishers Weekly
“With the flavor of an international thriller and deep explorations of grieving and healing, The Unmade World is a novel with heart.” –Aimee Jodoin, Foreword Magazine
“Both meditative and engaging, this novel of changed times and changed lives hangs on the vagaries of fate, touching on issues from the refugee crisis to corruption in college sports while rolling out the quiet suspense of whether justice will be served. Rich with issues of guilt, grief, and cultural dislocation; an accomplished work that’s good for book groups.” –Library Journal
“Despite graphic deaths and a variety of police cases, Yarbrough’s 11th work of fiction (The Realm of Last Chances, 2013, etc.) is less a murder mystery than an exploration of how abruptly lives can go off the rails. Actually, readers will root for all the novel’s tenderly drawn, flawed characters. Despite his book’s depiction of dark realities—the guilt and despair of the characters’ interior lives is matched by political turmoil in both the U.S. and Eastern Europe—Yarbrough’s pensively hopeful view of people’ capacity to endure, even prosper, shines through.” –Kirkus, starred
“The Unmade World is tone perfect, skillfully constructed and consummately realized. It’s the work of an extraordinary novelist. I’m fortunate to have read it.”—Richard Ford
“This many-layered novel is a thriller, a love story, a travelogue full of richly observed scenes, a morality tale replete with betrayal, remorse and lust for revenge, and a hilarious comedy. The tight control Yarbrough exercises over the ten-year span of the story kept me turning the pages and left me full of admiration.” –Colm Toibin
“What happens when everything you hold dear is taken from you? What kind of life must you live now? And how will you do it? These are just a few of the dramatically rich questions posed by Steve Yarbrough’s wonderful new novel, The Unmade World. Written with his characteristically compassionate yet unsentimental prose, and spanning a decade and two continents, Steve Yarbrough takes us deeply into the diverse lives of characters whose fates have forced them to confront the universal truth that everything given us is temporary, and we have only so much time to live the one life given to each of us. The Unmade World is a wise, moving, and deeply compelling story of our time here in the tumultuous early years of the 21st Century.—Andre Dubus III
“Steve Yarbrough is a master novelist, and this may be his finest work. Every word of The Unmade World rings true. Its settings are indelible. Its characters live and breathe. For a long time to come, I’ll be pondering what this book has taught me about the human heart.” –Amy Greene
“Heartbreaking and redemptive, The Unmade World . . . is a beautiful novel, thought provoking and moving and, for added pleasure, embedded with a murder mystery. Deeply satisfying, it stayed with me long after I read the last word, leaving me to muse about what the hapless Bogdan would so eloquently call the imponderables.” —Kathy Langer, Tattered Cover, Denver, CO
“The Unmade World explores with extraordinary compassion permutations of love, of loss, of consolation, of home. The parallel stories of an American journalist and a Polish grocer whose lives are changed by the same tragic event are the heart of the novel. But the dozens of finely-drawn characters, and developments circling from Poland to California and the Hudson Valley, to Poland again, are drawn with dazzling depth and detail, creating a wonderful richness. It will keep you up, it will break your heart and warm your heart—this is one you shouldn’t miss.”—Carole Horne, Harvard Bookstore, Cambridge, MA
“Oh my what a wonderful novel that grows and grows in power as one goes along. Fueled by beautiful writing The Unmade World swirls in a mixture of suspense, pathos and heartbreaking love where characters suffer losses, make mistakes, live misfortunes and take a stab at choices seemingly to reverse their fortunes but with decidedly mixed results. Ultimately characters find themselves faced with trying to figure out what is the right thing to do and then how to do it each knowing that humans have some broken parts and repairing what is possible to repair takes using a form of courage thought out of reach. This is the kind of novel that treats is inhabitants with tenderness and its readers with grace. It will not easily be forgotten.” –Sheryl Cotleur, Copperfields Books, California
“With elegant, economic prose Steve Yarbrough has fashioned a thriller wrapped in a literary novel. It brings to mind Graham Greene and Charles McCarry, with the crackling dialogue of George Higgins or Elmore Leonard . . . . This rich, multi-layered novel is deeply evocative: its compassionate melancholy will haunt you. Yarbrough is a smart, humane writer and his empathy shines on every page of The Unmade World. Also, the novel, in the right hands, would make a crackerjack movie.” —Corey Mesler, Burke’s Book Store, Memphis TN
“The Unmade World by Steve Yarbrough is an atmospheric novel of the first degree. Spanning the world from Poland to California to New York, Yarbrough writes of two men, Richard and Bogdan, who glimpse each other at the height of a tragedy. Both hope for and dread the day when they might meet again. A study of the human condition, this redemptive novel is timely and riveting. In 2016 Chicago Now said of author Steve Yarbrough, ‘He’s a contemporary, damn good author whose books need to be read.’ Here’s your chance!”—Nancy Simpson-Brice, Book Vault, Iowa
“Just a dynamite novel, one I admire and frankly had trouble putting down.” –Richard Howarth, Oxford Books, MS