Kirkus Reviews QR Code
SARAHLAND by Sam Cohen Kirkus Star

SARAHLAND

by Sam Cohen

Pub Date: March 9th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-5387-3506-0
Publisher: Grand Central Publishing

In Cohen’s debut, she explores queer identity through multiple lenses in a collection of short stories that push the boundaries of fiction.

The protagonists of Cohen’s stories are connected by one very specific attribute: They are each named Sarah, or some variation thereof. This seems, perhaps, like a strange premise for a collection, but the stories are bound together as well by a deep thematic interest in the multidimensionality of the self—especially the queer, Jewish, nonmale self—and the sometimes overwhelming number of possibilities of how a person or a life might be transformed. From a queer reimagining of the story of Abraham and Sarah from Genesis to a Jewish university freshman struggling against the constraints of compulsory heterosexuality to a young woman whose aspirational infatuation with the idea of horse camp allows her to transcend her human form, Cohen’s stories are profoundly original. While some hew closer to realism and others are more imaginative, they are each narrated in distinct voices and rendered in dreamy, glistening prose. Some of the collection’s more experimental stories manage to reach into the realm of the metaphysical, exploring possibilities of being and alternate universes; Cohen manages to do this in a manner that, remarkably, does not feel overwrought. As with any collection of stories, some feel more fully realized than others; this is perhaps exacerbated by the protagonists’ shared name, with the less memorable Sarahs fading into the background, their stories blurring together. But in general, Cohen’s book is impressively even, particularly for a debut.

A bold collection that explores how we might break free from or reimagine ourselves and our places in the universe.