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From the archives

Positively Shady

The glamorous activism of M.A.C Cosmetics

Muslim Pride

A timely LGBTQ memoir

Minor Hockey as Big Business

The disturbing shift from kids’ game to pricey investment

Into the Phantom Zone

A perceptive newcomer’s strange encounters with Canada

Lewis DeSoto

The Amazing Absorbing Boy

Rabindranath Maharaj

Knopf

335 pages, hardcover

ISBN: 9780307397270

The Amazing Absorbing Boy is a very funny book. But it is also many other things. Like the best of novels, it is as layered and enjoyable as a profound dream. It surprises, it amuses, it intrigues and it troubles. And, like a dream, it moves simultaneously through the quotidian details of daily life and into the deep levels of the psyche.

At first glance it is a gentle Candide-like satire of Canadian society, specifically Toronto, experienced over a period of two years by a somewhat reluctant would-be immigrant from Trinidad—16-year-old Samuel.

Also at first glance, the book is of a certain genre that has existed since travellers started recounting their travels, which in Canada begins significantly with the journals of the first European settlers—Susanna Moodie’s books are a good example. It is possible to read this book as the tale of an immigrant bewildered by a new land and its peculiar customs. The novel also falls under that wider...

Lewis DeSoto is the author of two novels and a biography of Emily Carr. His first novel, A Blade of Grass (HarperCollins, 2004), was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and was an international bestseller.

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