(Untitled)

May 14, 2007 07:13

I finally finished One of the Boys last night, and moved on to the mountain o' manga I've borrowed and received as gifts.

I spent most of my Indigo/Chapters gift cards that I got for my birthday, and picked up yet another book of queer history, as well as Douglas Coupland's JPod. I used to read Coupland's books the second they came out, but I ( Read more... )

manga, queer history, writing, douglas coupland

Leave a comment

Comments 2

jenjoou May 14 2007, 22:13:32 UTC
I've never read any Douglas Coupland. The amazon blurb says good things but I never quite trust those things.

Hope you're enjoying the manga.

Reply

felis_ultharus May 15 2007, 11:39:03 UTC
He's fascinating. Sometimes his pop culture stuff gets a little too cutesy for some people, but I like it.

Essentially, what interests Coupland is the times we're living in. That's nothing new -- the Modernists did the ame thing. But unlike them, he writes lucidly, and with a lot of brilliant, wry humour.

He popularized the terms "Generation X" and "McJob" in his first novel Generation X. It's about a group of Gen-Xers, looking for meaning and telling each other stories.

Then he wrote Shampoo Planet -- about our generation. After that, he wrote, Life After God, an autobiographical account of trying to find meaning in a cynical world. I read Polaroids from the Dead, but I can't remember a thing about it.

Microserfs is about a group of Microsoft employees who escape "the Cult of Bill" and decide to use their skills for good, not evil.

Miss Wyoming is about a former child beauty-pageant victim who uses being the sole survivor of a plane crash to escape her domineering mother and re-invent herself as a totally new person.

... )

Reply


Leave a comment

Up