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Fiction / Literary > A Town With No Noise

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A Town With No Noise

By Karen Smythe


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Publish Date

May 20, 2025

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$21.95
Samara and J., a struggling young couple, are off to J.’s birthplace, Upton Bay, a small town turned upscale theatre and winery destination. Sam has been hired by an editor friend to write a promotional piece about the place while she and J. stay with his grandfather Otto, a prominent businessman in his day. But their visit does not go as planned. Sam’s explorations of Upton’s tourist attractions lead her to ugly truths behind the quaint little town’s façade—discoveries that are counterpointed with vignettes of the town’s wealthy, elderly ruling class, painting a different picture than the one Sam’s friend expects her to provide. Tensions between Sam and J. worsen as J.’s true nature emerges and Sam begins to question both his values and his family’s past—especially after Otto tells them stories about his time as a German soldier during WW2. Back in the city, Sam’s opinions and judgments about what is right and wrong are tested when a shocking truth surfaces about her grandmother’s flight from Norway after the war, profoundly changing Sam's understanding of who she is and who she wants to become. In A Town with No Noise, fact and fiction combine to ask difficult questions about the communities we build, questions that are as relevant today as ever: Who stays? Who is chased away? And who decides?
Karen Smythe is the author of the novel This Side of Sad (Goose Lane Editions, 2017), the story collection Stubborn Bones (Polestar/Raincoast, 2001), and the critical study Figuring Grief: Gallant, Munro, and the Poetics of Elegy (McGill-Queen’s U.P., 1992). She lives in Guelph, Ontario.

ISBN: 9781990293924
Format: Paperback
Pages: 200
Publisher: Palimpsest Press
Published: May 20, 2025

A compelling novel of family secrets and revelations, Karen Smythe’s A Town With No Noise lays bare WWII histories of cruelty, connection, and the bright flame of repair and healing that persists into our present day. Read this powerful, moving story of a young woman coming to terms with the past, and confronting our contemporary inequalities, for its clarity and urgent call for reckoning.–Elise Levine, author of Say This and This Wicked Tongue The epigraph of Karen Smythe's novel A Town with No Noise is a gorgeous poem by Derek Walcott, which alludes to stories hidden in plain sight. Smythe's narrative wends through deceptively bucolic small-town Ontario, then Toronto, then northern Ontario, to arrive, finally, at the devastating story of a Jewish girl and her family in Nazi-occupied Norway. In this skilful intertextual weave of fiction and true history, the reader is shocked and moved to come upon a past in Europe that Smythe's characters—in Canada—would prefer to forget. Smythe's protagonist Samara has taken herself on a journey of revelation and remembrance, a journey that will make of her a writer: a healer and mender. And Karen Smythe has written this story: her novel is a captivating and brave achievement.—Dawn Promislow, author of Wan Karen Smythe is a brilliant and insightful observer of her character's inner lives, and A Town With No Noise is no exception. Smythe is a master at articulating tension between Samara and J., between their expectations and the reality that hides behind the facade of Upton Bay, and Samara's discoveries of certain character's pasts. Smythe's descriptions are gorgeous and poetic, her pacing deft and precise. A beautiful novel that I couldn't put down.—Danila Botha author of Things that Cause Inappropriate Happiness "In her brilliant experimental novel A Town with No Noise, Karen Smythe unveils the secret histories of two towns separated by time and geography -one in contemporary Ontario, one in Occupied Norway. It explores profound questions that are especially relevant today: What is true empathy? Who deserves our compassion? With its inventive layering of a fictional narrative with footnotes, a transcription of a recording, a play, journalism, and historical details, the novel invites us to question how history is written, remembered, and forgotten, and to listen to the stories of others. A Town with No Noise will surprise, move, and push you to see the world differently, as only the best fiction can.—Kasia Jaronczyk, author of Voices in the Air and Lemons