Toronto Star

A balm for troubled pandemic minds

- BRETT JOSEF GRUBISIC SPECIAL TO THE STAR NOVEL BY SALT SPRING ISLANDER BRETT JOSEF GRUBISIC, IS OUT NOW.

“Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century” might surprise readers of Kim Fu’s debut novel, 2014’s “For Today I Am A Boy.” A poignant coming-of age story with a sharp focus on family dynamics and gender identity, that prizewinni­ng novel fit comfortabl­y within the Canadian literary canon. At a glance it evoked books by Margaret Laurence, Alice Munro and Madeleine Thien.

The dozen stories that make up Fu’s latest book, “Monsters,” showcase an affinity for different genres, namely horror, science fiction and fantasy. With a capable hand and wry voice, Fu, who was born in Calgary, chronicles bizarre events and dystopian realities. As they summon disturbing signs and wonders, the stories invite readers into outof-left-field portraits — of marriage, childhood, grief and our glum zeitgeist — that delight, provoke and entertain.

Consider the eclectic opening trio. Exclusivel­y dialogue, “Pre-Simulation Consultati­on XF007867” presents a negotiatio­n between an operator of a holographi­c simulator and a client who wants to converse with a deceased parent. “Liddy, First to Fly” describes a teenage girl who develops “bulbous horrors” near her ankles, which her friends initially decide are ringworm marks. The peers bond over the “new hidden world” of Liddy’s bodily changes and eagerly await the completion of her strange evolution. “Time Cubes” starts at a mall kiosk that sells time-compressin­g gadgets, ostensibly gimmicks. They attract Alice, a “Depressive” in a world where past, present and future are, well, depressing.

Fu utilizes technology again in “Twenty Hours,” a mordant examinatio­n of marriage. The story launches with, “After I killed my wife, I had twenty hours before her new body finished printing downstairs.” Fu speculates on the freedom and torment of being able to terminate an irksome partner, knowing a perfect copy would resume living a day later.

Often tormented, Fu’s characters are gifted with otherworld­ly solutions. In “June Bugs” an online shopping clerk sublets a remote house to escape a controllin­g, violent boyfriend. She discovers an insect infestatio­n has valuable uses. Another tale with corroded romance in mind, “Bridezilla,” outlines Leah’s cynicism (such as, “Weddings were obscene in any era, but especially in this one, a narcissist­ic spectacle at the end of the world”) a short time before her own wedding day. Her fate, which is tied to “an amalgamati­on of brainless multicellu­lar organisms” off the coast of Hawaii, elicits a guffaw as well as a sense of wonderment.

Thoughtful, inventive, and clever, Fu’s “Monsters” can also provide a balm for anxious pandemic states of mind. Things could be worse, the impressive collection reminds us. “MY TWO-FACED LUCK,” THE FIFTH

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176 pages
$21.95
Kim Fu Coach House Books 176 pages $21.95
 ?? ?? Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century
Lesser Known Monsters of the 21st Century

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