Mysterious as we are

Shawn Syms’s debut story collection dazzles


The “Beat Generation” are fondly (or infamously) remembered as the writers who exploded the myth of a prim and proper America in the 1950s, shocking middlebrow types with their tales of drug addiction, queer sex and disaffected wanderings. In the decades since, many a young writer has looked for “edgy” cachet by dabbling in tales from society’s margins. With his debut short-story collection, Nothing Looks Familiar, one might be tempted to lump Shawn Syms in with them, but one would be very wrong.

“Charla didn’t really see gays or bisexuals as especially different from straight men. She figured that they all had the capacity to be goofy or decent.”

That capacity is what fascinates here. These are stories about agency and the choices we make. Whether young or old, rich or poor, straight or gay, everyone here is trying to take charge of their own destiny. Some succeed, some fail, some manage both at once, and the book continually surprises. “Snap” seethes with tension, while “Four Pills” ambles to a creepy twist; “Man, Woman and Child” is giddily perverse, while “The Exchange” is quietly triumphant. And while the reader might struggle to place some moral judgment on a character like Beth in “East on 132,” Syms never does, never takes the easy path.

It’s hard to say whether you’ll love the world Syms creates in Nothing Looks Familiar because you’re already living in it, but as he hopscotches across both Canada and the human psyche, you’ll love the journey.

Nothing Looks Familiar, by Shawn Syms
$15.95, Arsenal Pulp Press
Available at Glad Day Bookshop or your favourite independent bookstore

Launch party at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre
Tues, Sept 9, 7pm
with special guests Vivek Shraya, Alec Butler and Marcy Rogers

A former editor of the late, lamented fab magazine, Scott has been writing for Xtra since 2007 on a variety of topics in news pieces, interviews, blogs, reviews and humour pieces. He lives on the Danforth with his boyfriend of 12 years, a manic Jack Russell Terrier, a well-stocked mini-bar and a shelf of toy Daleks.

Read More About:
Culture, Books, Toronto, Arts

Keep Reading

The cover of Charity and Sylvia

‘Charity and Sylvia’ beautifully illustrates a real-life 19th-century lesbian couple

Tillie Walden’s new graphic novel tracks the true story of Charity Bryant and Sylvia Drake’s decades-long New England romance
Portland Fire guard Bridget Carleton (6) drives against Toronto Tempo forward Nyara Sabally (8).

The Toronto Tempo are a much-needed source of hope and connection for Canada’s queer community

Women’s sports are booming in North America. Canada’s first WNBA team is meeting the moment

Should AI use stop you from seeing ‘Stop! That! Train!’?

Director Adam Shankman told Xtra that the film actually did use some AI in its visual effects
Marcia Marcia Marcia, Brooke Lynn Hytes, and Symone in STOP! THAT! TRAIN!

‘Stop! That! Train!’ director Adam Shankman says the movie used AI

Shankman sat down with Xtra to talk RuPaul, modern gay cinema—and exactly how much AI was used in his film
Advertisement