Coexistence Stories

Billy-Ray Belcourt

Book - 2024

"A collection of intersecting stories about Indigenous love and loneliness from a Giller-longlisted author and one of contemporary literature's most boundless minds. Across the prairies and Canada's west coast, on reservations and university campuses, at literary festivals and existential crossroads, the characters in Coexistence are searching for connection. They're learning to live with and understand one another, to see beauty and terror side by side, and to accept that the past, present, and future can inhabit a single moment. An aging mother confides in her son about an intimate friendship from her distant girlhood. A middling poet is haunted by the cliché his life has become. A chorus of anonymous gay men dispense... unvarnished truths about their sex lives. A man freshly released from prison finds that life on the outside has sinister strictures of its own. A PhD student dog-sits for his parents at what was once a lodging for nuns operating a residential school--a house where the spectre of Catholicism comes to feel eerily literal. Bearing the compression, crystalline sentences, and emotional potency that have characterized his earlier books, Coexistence is a testament to Belcourt's mastery of and playfulness in any literary form. A vital addition to an already rich catalogue, this is a must-read collection and the work of an author at the height of his powers."--

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Subjects
Genres
Short stories
Published
New York, NY : W.W. Norton [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Billy-Ray Belcourt (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
156 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references.
ISBN
9781324075943
  • One woman's memories
  • Lived experience
  • Poetry class
  • Sex lives: an anonymous chorus
  • Young adults
  • Literary festival
  • Outside
  • Summer research
  • My diary
  • Various people.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this scintillating collection from Indigenous Canadian author Belcourt (A Minor Chorus), queer Cree men grapple with the legacy of colonialism. "Being Indigenous in the twenty-first century can mean that a single hour can be governed simultaneously by joy and sadness," says the narrator of "Lived Experience." Such conflicting emotions play into his ambivalence about sex, but after swearing off encounters with other men, he falls for a painter named Will, and shows up at Will's art gallery opening wearing a denim jacket emblazoned with the phrase "GAY 4 PAY JK ABOLISH WORK." Amorous and economic concerns also overlap in "Poetry Class," about a poet who believes in the "revolutionary demand" of his craft, while his ex was obsessed with satisfying the market. In the gritty and moving "Outside," a restless young man named Jack beats a drug trafficking charge, returns from jail to his grandmother's trailer on the reservation, and matches on Tinder with a neighbor named Lucy. Throughout, Belcourt sheds light on the transformative potential of love, describing, for instance, how Jack is changed by Lucy when she invites him into her life, which "open space inside his mind for different memories" and drives him to "give over to new pasts, future emotional histories." These wise and open-hearted stories astonish. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

This set of interconnected stories explores the lives of Indigenous characters--all of whom are tortured in some way by romantic grief or confusion--in a range of settings across Canada. We encounter a mother who confides to her son about her youthful passion for another girl, a parolee who struggles to orient his need for companionship as a free man, and several artist figures who agonize over their creative and erotic frustrations. The impact of past and ongoing colonial violence against Indigenous peoples forms a prominent thematic backdrop here, and the dysfunction plaguing individual characters' lives is overtly linked to systemic forms of trauma. These stories are earnestly told, and the author's concern for drawing attention to marginalized forms of suffering is clear. However, the narrative's didactic impulse--paired with the adolescent sentimentality that is this collection's guiding sensibility--produces rather hollow effects that tend to undermine the plausibility of the individuals it presents to us. The author favors direct summations of his characters' lives and motivations, which often manage to be at once maudlin, portentous, and fuzzy: "He wonders what the world will be without her in it. The truth: it will be nothing and it will be everything." A reliance on academic jargon sometimes takes the place of any genuine psychological probing, as in this description of a man eavesdropping on his neighbors' lovemaking: "Their animal sounds remind me that the I is a trick of the light and that the plural is dense and unbearable." Though the collection aims to confront large themes--most obviously, the impact of colonialism and intergenerational trauma on Indigenous sexuality--it seems, at last, not to illuminate the subjects it would represent, but to evade them. A sincere collection of stories chronicling love and loss. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.