Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Trending Now

Newsom threatens to yank funding from universities that comply with Trump demands

GST/HST credit payments are landing in Quebec today and here’s how much you could get

The Loss of Genre Vets Is Definitely Felt

Harris Dickinson on the films that influenced his commanding directorial debut Urchin • Journal • A Magazine • , Life in canada

How to enable secure boot and TPM 2.0 for Black Ops 7

With a Friend like this, who needs enemies? Canada reviews

Lifetime's 'Surviving My Father' Tells Chilling True Story of Polygamist Cult Leader (Exclusive)

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact us
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
  • What’s On
  • Reviews
  • Digital World
  • Lifestyle
  • Travel
  • Trending
  • Web Stories
Newsletter
Canadian ReviewsCanadian Reviews
You are at:Home » Russell Smith’s Self Care puts incel behaviour and performative wokeness under the microscope | Canada Voices
Lifestyle

Russell Smith’s Self Care puts incel behaviour and performative wokeness under the microscope | Canada Voices

3 October 20254 Mins Read

  • Title: Self Care
  • Author: Russell Smith
  • Genre: Fiction
  • Publisher: Biblioasis
  • Pages: 224
Open this photo in gallery:

Russell Smith bleak, horny comedy Self Care holds up a funhouse mirror to the human desire to connect.MALCOLM BROWN/Supplied

A Russell Smith novel tends to come with the promise of sex and satire; familiar readers arrive prepared for quips and digs at the myriad lunacies of the young and status-obsessed in the glittering city. His latest, Self Care, takes caustic aim at aggrieved incels and performative sex-positive liberals.

Smith’s protagonist, Gloria, is a freelance journalist in Toronto. Well, that’s what she might call herself – in reality she is hard at work in the content mines, a precarious independent contractor at the mercy of an editor who wants her to write sexy, mostly apolitical content that gets megaclicks.

Books we’re reading and loving in October

Gloria considers herself mostly a good person, even though she is callous to her clingy, deeply depressed roommate and frequently fabricates sources for her loosely “reported” stories. Her milieu, mostly recent graduates from an unnamed university modelled on the University of Toronto, consider themselves arbiters of taste and ethics despite being disconnected and frequently unkind. Most of them are also on SSRIs or stimulants to treat various mental illnesses.

Smith paints her circle with a fairly broad cloth – her best friend, Isabel, is a classically beautiful manic pixie with a history of suicidal ideation and age-gap relationships; her regular lover, Florian, is a bartender who lives in Parkdale and, despite being a chill feminist dude, only ever texts back when he wants to hook up at 3 a.m. The characters are, for the most part, caricatures drawn with a cruel pen in a slightly outdated fashion.

Self Care is set in the post-COVID-19, post-2018 Toronto incel-motivated van attack present, but the twentysomethings text like boomers and are written from an ironic distance that feels more from the Bret Easton Ellis era than the time of Elon Musk.

Open this photo in gallery:

Self Care by Russell Smith takes place in modern day Toronto.Supplied

But the lack of veracity to the way people talk and act this deep into the 21st century, to borrow some Gen-X apathy, doesn’t matter. The novel’s main strength is in Smith’s gleefully bleak point of view, and the moments where he lets his narrowly defined characters chafe against the values they want other people to think they hold.

The main tension arrives as Gloria walks through an alt-right demonstration put on by men who loudly hate women. Daryn, one of the terminally online, red-pilled incel demonstrators wearing a sad-face pin, catches her attention as she makes her way from her an interview for her precarious content-creator role. She calls him “cute” – half mocking, half seriously – and watches some kind of spasm, perhaps of desire, run through his body; it feels like she has power.

Gloria goes home and googles the sad-face insignia, landing herself in various alt-right forums. She convinces herself Daryn would make a great interview subject and proceeds to meet up with him in a public place, and, despite her reservations, invite him back to her house and sexually dominates him. Smith’s deft touch with sex as a site of conflict and power makes what might be titillating into a commentary on the conflicting desires embedded into an ironized world.

Gloria becomes enraptured with feeling a man – even a possible incel terrorist – might want to love her in some of the ways chill feminist dudes like Florian would never. Daryn, for one thing, never tries to choke her during sex, a porn-coded act which is fairly de rigueur for men in Gloria’s artsy circle.

From the archive: The alt-right vs. the avant-garde, written by Russell Smith

Gloria and Daryn become lovers crossed not by stars but by a vastly deteriorated social fabric where polar extremes born online increasingly define reality. It’s no spoiler to say that both sides, it turns out, have a hunger and a loneliness so expansive that it will never quite be crossed.

Smith’s bleak, horny comedy holds up a funhouse mirror to an aspect of the human condition that feels unique but has always endured: What do we owe others, and why is there something so funny in the tragedy of our constant failure to connect?

While there are no satisfying answers provided in Smith’s novel (nor in any novel), there is an undeniably stylish brutality to his portrait of desperately lonely urbanites; when it hits you, you just might laugh.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Telegram Email

Related Articles

Newsom threatens to yank funding from universities that comply with Trump demands

Lifestyle 3 October 2025

GST/HST credit payments are landing in Quebec today and here’s how much you could get

Lifestyle 3 October 2025

The Loss of Genre Vets Is Definitely Felt

Lifestyle 3 October 2025

How to enable secure boot and TPM 2.0 for Black Ops 7

Lifestyle 3 October 2025

Lifetime's 'Surviving My Father' Tells Chilling True Story of Polygamist Cult Leader (Exclusive)

Lifestyle 3 October 2025

3rd Oct: Wonder Park (2019), 1hr 27m [PG] – Streaming Again (5.95/10)

Lifestyle 3 October 2025
Top Articles

The ocean’s ‘sparkly glow’: Here’s where to witness bioluminescence in B.C. 

14 August 2025293 Views

These Ontario employers were just ranked among best in Canada

17 July 2025273 Views

What the research says about Tylenol, pregnancy and autism | Canada Voices

12 September 2025154 Views

Getting a taste of Maori culture in New Zealand’s overlooked Auckland | Canada Voices

12 July 2025140 Views
Demo
Don't Miss
Reviews 3 October 2025

With a Friend like this, who needs enemies? Canada reviews

This is Optimizer, a weekly newsletter sent every Friday from Verge senior reviewer Victoria Song…

Lifetime's 'Surviving My Father' Tells Chilling True Story of Polygamist Cult Leader (Exclusive)

Toronto is going to be hot this weekend and here’s how to make the most of it

The Beautiful Asian City Named The Best-Value Long-Haul Destination To Visit This Winter, Canada Reviews

About Us
About Us

Canadian Reviews is your one-stop website for the latest Canadian trends and things to do, follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube WhatsApp
Our Picks

Newsom threatens to yank funding from universities that comply with Trump demands

GST/HST credit payments are landing in Quebec today and here’s how much you could get

The Loss of Genre Vets Is Definitely Felt

Most Popular

Why You Should Consider Investing with IC Markets

28 April 202424 Views

OANDA Review – Low costs and no deposit requirements

28 April 2024347 Views

LearnToTrade: A Comprehensive Look at the Controversial Trading School

28 April 202449 Views
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact us

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.