Praise for Self Care“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.”—Emily M. Keeler, Globe and Mail"More than 30 years after he started chronicling the sexual habits and proclivities of young urban professionals in his debut, How Insensitive, Smith is still at it in this story of a female journalist whose relationship with a man she’s ostensibly interviewing for an article on incel culture starts crossing into risky sexual and emotional territory."—Emily Donaldson, Globe and Mail“Provocative . . . Daryn is a person as well as a possible woman-hater. Smith says getting to know both of these separate personalities to see what’s underneath might be worth a shot.”—Sam Franzini, Our Culture Mag"Smith’s writing is at its best when he’s skewering the often performative nature of sex, dating, and politics, as well as the solipsistic delusion of 21st-century life. [Self Care is] an uncomfortable, disturbing, and timely examination of relationships between men and women."—Kirkus Reviews“A searing indictment of shallow, self-obsessed online culture and the deep disconnects in society, Canadian writer Smith's latest examines trauma and tragedy and delves into the difference between performing care and actually caring.”—Booklist“Smith often accurately and anthropologically puts his finger directly on the throbbing purple bruise of modern discontent, disaffection and alienation . . . Self Care isn’t just poking fun. It is also, in many ways, deeply sympathetic to its characters, who are struggling with a world very different from the ones their parents grew up in . . . With a deft touch and authentic dialogue, Smith explores the slippery notion of sex and attraction among people who are outwardly ambiguous about traditional relationships and who seem averse to exploring grey areas.”—Jill Wilson, Winnipeg Free Press“Smith is adroitly capturing the volatile, anxiety-ridden world of men and women in their twenties . . . Self Care is a revealing rollercoaster ride, a compassionate yet unflinching window into troubled lives of today’s young adults.”—Tim Niedermann, Ottawa Review of Books“You can always count on Russell Smith for a straightforward technique that hits you in the solar plexus . . . The novel’s title proves piercingly ironic: this is a book about people whose absolute inability to care for themselves is the product of social alienation and a world in which everything—from proscribed gender roles to the ravages of unfettered capitalism—is stacked against them. That the only escape from this cycle of despondency appears to be violent is the ultimate indictment in this bleak, acerbic fable of our benighted time.”—Steven W. Beattie, That Shakespearean Rag"A perverse, bleak, often hilarious Romeo-and-Juliet tale for our cultural moment. Smith renders the self-obsessed urban landscape with absolute precision."—Mark Kingwell, author of Question Authority: A Polemic About Trust in Five Meditations"A gripping, unforgettable story about a young journalist and her secret incel lover that explodes the fairy tale of the frog prince. It had me sitting on the edge of my seat."—Susan Swan, author of Big Girls Don't Cry“A millennial tragedy that is also smart, funny, and mercifully free of piety and exculpation. Self Care is a book and an attitude adjustment that CanLit could really use.”—Timothy Taylor, author of The Rule of Stephens"With Self Care, Smith writes with the exacting and intimate observation for which he is known and loved, offering an unflinching play-by-play of protagonist Gloria’s murky interiority as she navigates an insidious but intimate relationship with incel Daryn. Think sharp psychological realism of Kristen Roupenian’s “Cat Person” or Graham and Thorne’s Adolescence. Smith’s ability to bravely take readers to the very edge of tenderness in the face of danger leaves one with something more profound than a lesson and more encompassing than a fact. Self Care is a story as hard to look at as it is well-observed. It haunted me and I couldn’t put it down."—Aley Waterman, author of Mudflowers"Consumed this jewel of a novel in a single sitting . . . Upsetting and hilarious by turns, it is a sort of updated comedy of manners, really, about a wellness blogger who dominates an incel. By one of Canada’s closest social observers."—Stephen Marche, author of On Writing and FailurePraise for Russell Smith“For me at least, Canada’s most fascinating writer, the author whose new books and stories I most eagerly anticipate, whose fiction I approach with a hopeful curiosity.”—Jeet Heer“Russell Smith is one of the best stylists of my generation. His prose is exact, surprising, and written by a man with a fine ear.”—Andre Alexis, author of Fifteen Dogs“Smith writes some of the most luminous prose in Canadian fiction . . . He mines and refines the best of what has come before on the way to making it his own.”—Montreal Gazette “[Confidence is] a poisonously funny portrait of the so-hip-it-hurts fashion, food, and bar scene.”—Maclean’s“Smith . . . is a gifted anthropologist of the urbane. Those gifts are on full display throughout Confidence.”—Globe and Mail