I think Girlfriend in the Coma is probably a good book if you don't understand the Smiths references. But not understanding the Smiths probably makes the whole world a better place.
― Martin, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
I've not read Generation X, but I've flipped through a couple of chapters and laughed cynically. Does that mean I R more Gen X than Coupland? Personally, I think he's a twat. But then again I would, wouldn't I? Postcards from the Dead had a few good moments but nothing zeitgeist bustingly YUM, the git.
― Sarah, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― Edna Welthorpe, Mrs, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― katie, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― chris, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― Jordan, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― helen fordsdale, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
I stopped reading his books after that.
― ogden, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― Nick, Friday, 30 November 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― geoff, Saturday, 1 December 2001 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link
― david h (david h), Saturday, 28 September 2002 09:31 (twenty-one years ago) link
― mark s (mark s), Saturday, 28 September 2002 23:39 (twenty-one years ago) link
― donna (donna), Sunday, 29 September 2002 02:04 (twenty-one years ago) link
― CarsmileSteve (CarsmileSteve), Sunday, 29 September 2002 09:11 (twenty-one years ago) link
― chris (chris), Sunday, 29 September 2002 09:23 (twenty-one years ago) link
― J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Sunday, 29 September 2002 21:01 (twenty-one years ago) link
― lyra (lyra), Monday, 30 September 2002 02:11 (twenty-one years ago) link
Anyone else care to discuss the man?
― Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Sunday, 24 August 2003 21:52 (twenty years ago) link
― ailsa (ailsa), Sunday, 24 August 2003 22:21 (twenty years ago) link
― Spencer Chow (spencermfi), Sunday, 24 August 2003 22:23 (twenty years ago) link
I'd still take "Microserfs" over all other, though. The tale of wipe-clean witticisms with complete emotional death to the world underneath.
― Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Sunday, 24 August 2003 22:31 (twenty years ago) link
― The Lex (The Lex), Sunday, 24 August 2003 22:51 (twenty years ago) link
― jed_e_3 (jed_e_3), Sunday, 24 August 2003 23:03 (twenty years ago) link
Think "Shampoo Planet" is massively underrated, love it to bits.
― J0hn Darn1elle (J0hn Darn1elle), Monday, 25 August 2003 03:02 (twenty years ago) link
read it over the weekend, 450 pages in 3 days. i did skip the 40 pages or so of pi and random digits though. the typesetting tricks felt like a gimmick though, were overdone.
― koogy wonderland (koogs), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 11:17 (seventeen years ago) link
― Mädchen (Madchen), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 11:23 (seventeen years ago) link
― sunny successor (katharine), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 11:47 (seventeen years ago) link
― sunny successor (katharine), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 11:48 (seventeen years ago) link
i enjoyed it, for what that's worth. amazon is full of 1 and 5 star reviews (more 1s than 5s). critics are divided.
― koogy wonderland (koogs), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 11:59 (seventeen years ago) link
― Raymond Cummings (Raymond Cummings), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 14:45 (seventeen years ago) link
― askance johnson (sdownes), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 14:56 (seventeen years ago) link
I tend to really like reading him, though I do admit a general sense of dissatisfaction with the endings as well. It's more like I'm interested with the characters than with the resolutions to the stories themselves.
All Families are Psychotic was a failed experiment, for sure, and I think he rushed it, because there were a lot of stupid little mistakes in there, like the their/there/they're thing, and at one point one of his characters picked up a spoon but put down a fork (or vice versa). The two after that, where he wrote as a female character, also hit and miss, though Eleanor Rigby was better than I thought it was going to be.
JPod was actually quite good, because I totally recognize the characters. I just wish he'd have gotten rid of those sections where he wasted tens of pages of paper per copy trying to make some nerd point; but you can bet there's someone poring through the digits of pi looking for the one number he's changed, so maybe that's part of the joke. And I do kind of like the concept of him writing himself in as the antagonist, so maybe that makes up for the eye-rolling parts.
― Sean Carruthers (SeanC), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 15:51 (seventeen years ago) link
He's in an odd position, the guy, and while it's easy to dismiss him for it -- as a kind of teenage enthusiasm -- there's a level on which I keep deciding it's awfully brave of him. He's stranded: he writes books that are about people's lives and culture now, in a very "pop" way, a very light-reading unliterary way -- but he takes the stuff seriously enough, reaches for enough emotional impact, and plays enough tricks that it can feel like his writing aspires to high lit. The fact that it's really neither/nor brings him in for a lot of abuse (the terrible downslide in quality doesn't help, either), but it always makes me wonder why there aren't more people successfully filling that particular gap in fiction.
(And then the answer sometimes comes that people are maybe more interested in the "culture" part than the "taking it seriously" / "raching for emotional impact" part, and "culture" is always easily sold in movie form. Oh D Coupland, you were, evidently, my generation's Garden State.)
― nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 15:59 (seventeen years ago) link
― nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:02 (seventeen years ago) link
yike, that sounds like an eye-rolling part to me. can anyone write fiction without putting themselves in it or doing some meta-footnote trickery nowadays? ditto Kaufman-esque movie trickery ..... used to love that stuff but I am way past the breaking point. get (1) original gimmick.
― Renard (Renard), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:12 (seventeen years ago) link
― nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― 333333333333 (33333), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:14 (seventeen years ago) link
― 333333333333 (33333), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:15 (seventeen years ago) link
har har
I'm just saying that post David Foster Wallace / Paul Auster / Bret Easton Ellis / Charlie Kaufman and whoever else in modern fiction has written themself in as a character, I consider it a mark on the negative side to fall back on this tactic. it seems overused in modern fiction. not a clever idea to "redeem the eye-rolling parts." that's all ....
I do like Coupland, I read all his stuff up through Polaroids.
― Renard (Renard), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:36 (seventeen years ago) link
I gave DC a ticket to the glasgow underground once. He promised to put it in one of his collages. Ahem.
― stet (stet), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 16:38 (seventeen years ago) link
― nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:27 (seventeen years ago) link
- "even your list is reaching"- "And how much exactly is it a 'trick'"
― nabisco (nabisco), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 17:30 (seventeen years ago) link
― jeffrey (johnson), Tuesday, 13 June 2006 21:34 (seventeen years ago) link
how JPod relates to microserfs is interesting, same characters(?) but no mention of their earlier life / exploits. (um, read a review recently for some other book that did something similar). ha, object re-use applied to literature i guess.
what did they want the safety deposit key for? did they ever use it?
spent a lot of the book confusing d. coupland with w. gibson, especially 'pattern recognition'. coupland's odd in that i've read 75% of his books but don't really care about the other 25%. i guess i only bought this one because i saw it cheap and the microserfs connection.
― koogy wonderland (koogs), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 12:00 (seventeen years ago) link
― suzy (suzy), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 12:19 (seventeen years ago) link
i didn't see anything odd in the autism theories, oddly enough - had thought the same thing to myself for some time (possibly as a result of reading it elsewhere).
didn't he try and explain the parents in terms of being the Greatest Generation or something. or were they just hippy parents 40 years on?
review from the weekend (possibly several weekends ago that i just got around to reading prior to recycling) mentioned John Irving and, whilst dc hiself denies the connection having not read any JI, there is a similarity there, i think. unfortunately i fell asleep before he was talked about on newsnight review.
― koogy wonderland (koogs), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 13:08 (seventeen years ago) link
― suzy (suzy), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 13:11 (seventeen years ago) link
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/programmes/newsnight/review/default.stm
it's not very interesting though.
― jed_ (jed), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 13:45 (seventeen years ago) link
they give away the end! 8)
(plus she didn't shoot the biker, it was electrocution.)
― koogy wonderland (koogs), Wednesday, 14 June 2006 14:34 (seventeen years ago) link
reading jpod at the moment. i like it. find it hard to stop reading. a bit too knowing with the clever-cleverness at times but am looking forward to reading the rest of his books.
― mr x, Saturday, 8 December 2007 21:00 (sixteen years ago) link
Also, how is there a TV series of Jpod? It's so weird, like The IT Crowd crossed with Ikea and nothing like the book at all.
― James Mitchell, Friday, 25 January 2008 01:30 (sixteen years ago) link
I actually had a moment of nostalgia and read JPod! It was not good, but all the not-good things about it were like familiar Coupland things that just made me go "aww" instead of "eww." Kind of an "oh, Couplandpaws" thing.
― nabisco, Friday, 25 January 2008 02:00 (sixteen years ago) link
Is anybody bothering with Generation A?
― James Mitchell, Monday, 5 October 2009 07:33 (fourteen years ago) link
Just got it out the library. Not read it yet. Nice yellow cover though (reminds me of those old gollancz sf books).
― my name is ὀνοματοποιία (Ned Trifle II), Monday, 5 October 2009 08:27 (fourteen years ago) link
Publishers sent me a copy in August, first time I've ever been meh-ed out by Coupland (whose cursory observations usually bring me out in hives of love but not this time).
― edward everett horton hears a who (suzy), Monday, 5 October 2009 08:52 (fourteen years ago) link
I take it that the story is to Generation X what Jpod was to Microserfs?
― James Mitchell, Monday, 5 October 2009 08:53 (fourteen years ago) link
i.e. a rewrite with updated references to Facebook and the like.
Argh, jPod gave me a rash, and since then each new Coupland book has been held in my hands briefly in the bookshop before I think "this will be awful" and put it back.
― ein fisch schwimmt im wasser · fisch im wasser durstig (a passing spacecadet), Monday, 5 October 2009 09:37 (fourteen years ago) link
Bizarre thing about JPod is that the TV series was such an improvement on the book.
― treefell, Monday, 5 October 2009 09:52 (fourteen years ago) link
anybody get the custom-designed dustjacket?
― DAN P3RRY MAD AT GRANDMA (just1n3), Monday, 5 October 2009 15:11 (fourteen years ago) link
Didn't the series have Alan Thicke? I think that was why I was afraid of watching it.
― The ever dapper nicolars (Nicole), Monday, 5 October 2009 15:14 (fourteen years ago) link
He was awesome in Jpod.
― James Mitchell, Monday, 5 October 2009 17:42 (fourteen years ago) link
Generation A left me underwhelmed I have to say. Seemed to start off well and it was a good idea but it just seemed to coast a bit after the first few chapters. Also I wasn't convinced by the characters from different countries, the european guy and the Indian guy were both too stereotypical which irritated me. Fun in places, but overall a bit empty. You know, like life. Ha!
― PC Thug (Ned Trifle II), Wednesday, 28 October 2009 10:36 (fourteen years ago) link
45 thoughts on the next decade:
Stupid people will be in charge, only to be replaced by ever-stupider people. You will live in a world without kings, only princes in whom our faith is shattered.
We will accept the obvious truth that we brought this upon ourselves.
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/a-radical-pessimists-guide-to-the-next-10-years/article1750609/page1/
― kind of shrill and very self-righteous (Dr Morbius), Sunday, 10 October 2010 16:51 (thirteen years ago) link
The day Copeland writes a book about the singularity, I'll cry.
― The Ten Things I Hate About Commandments (Abbbottt), Sunday, 10 October 2010 19:59 (thirteen years ago) link
Coming to the ritzier neighbourhoods of Vancouver: Coupland's V-POLES.
Operative word in the headline is "may".
― everything, Wednesday, 23 May 2012 18:40 (eleven years ago) link
I've been getting back into him. (Loved the first four books as a teenager; didn't like Polaroids or Coma and never followed him again.) Read Hey Nostradamus over the summer and just finished Generation A, liked both a lot and actually thought Generation A was great, the way all this stuff that never really added up suddenly came together in a totally unexpected way with the twist. Not a rewrite of X at all.
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 September 2017 04:05 (six years ago) link
Been digging back into Microserfs - always thought his stuff was light fluffy reading but this is kind of a slog tbh
― licorice oratorio (baaderonixx), Wednesday, 27 September 2017 10:24 (six years ago) link
the european guy and the Indian guy were both too stereotypical which irritated me
I really liked Harj (who was Sri Lankan, not Indian). I'm not sure in what ways he was stereotypical, really (although I'm not sure "Vetharanayan" is a common last name; "Vethanarayan" sounds more likely to me). I really liked how he was always very conscious of the stereotypical impressions that Westerners, especially Americans, would have of him, and would manipulate or leverage these to achieve his goals. There were two major French characters and I don't really think "self-absorbed WoW addict" or "sarcastic assholish scientific genius" are dominant French stereotypes?
― No purposes. Sounds. (Sund4r), Wednesday, 27 September 2017 13:34 (six years ago) link
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHZJjXph4kA
Most recently updated DC thread, so for those interested, https://westvancouverartmuseum.ca/exhibitions/rabbit-lane-douglas-coupland is winding up this weekend in Vancouver, BC. Photographs inspired by his _Girlfriend in a Coma_. Ordered the show's catalog for $46 incl s&h to the US.
Was happy reading _Binge_, his latest - brief vignettes flitting around various characters, some interconnected, with his usual witty character observations.
― the body of a spider... (scampering alpaca), Thursday, 19 May 2022 14:38 (one year ago) link