Douglas Coupland - The Gun Thief

Douglas Coupland - The Gun Thief

Douglas Coupland
2007

Bethany and Roger begin a bizarre and lovely Staples relationship when Bethany finds that he’s been impersonating her in his journal. Bethany write him back, and thus begins The Gum Thief, Douglas Coupland’s epistolary novel about living a life that didn’t go exactly the way you planned. Bethany is a twentysomething goth, Roger a mid-40s alcoholic divorcee. Roger is working on a novel, Glove Pond and we get excerpts from it interspersed throughout the book, and inside Glove Pond, one of the characters, Kyle, is writing a book set in a Staples. It’s all very self-referential and lovely.

In addition to letters from Bethany and Roger, we also get a few letters by ancillary characters: Bethany’s mom, Roger’s ex-wife, co-workers who witnessed the events at Staples. It allows us to see other people’s perspectives of the same events. The book is really quite subtle and funny. I found the relationship that grew between Bethany and Roger really quite touching, and the book within a book within a book made my head hurt a bit. Unlike jPod and some of his other books, Coupland refrained from pages of three letter scrabble words and those sorts of things. Instead, we get a series of essays about what it’s like to be the slice of bread being buttered.

I flew through this book, and enjoyed it a lot. I think my favourite Coupland book is Hey Nostradamus!, which I haven’t reviewed on this blog yet, but I may make time to do eventually. I bought two more of his books on the weekend and will get to them eventually as well.

 

Foundation's Edge - Isaac Asimov

Foundation's Edge - Isaac Asimov

Isaac Asimov
1982

Oh, the Foundation series rears its head again. This one is the fourth book, set about five hundred years into the Foundation era. It was written about 30 years after the original trilogy was published. Asimov himself admitted to writing this book for two reasons: pressure from the fans, and the obsecene amount of money paid to him by the publishers. Apparently, they drove a dump truck full of money up to his front door, or maybe gave him the world’s biggest oversized novelty cheque. Anyways, due to the timeframe and the Scrooge McDuckiness of the whole thing, I was a little wary.

You know when things are going so well that you start thinking that something sinister must be going on that you simply can’t see? That’s the premise of this edition of the Foundation series. Foundation’s Edge continues the epic tale of political inter-planetary intrigue laid out in Foundation, Foundation And Empire and Second Foundation. We saw the Second Foundation “taken down” in the last book, but it turns out they’re not really gone. Things are going swimmingly for both Foundations, following the Seldon Plan so closely that it starts making people in both foundations start to scratch their heads. Officials on both sides send out people to spy on the other, trying to find out what’s really going on. Things come to a head at the planet Gaia, where a big showdown takes place, and everything comes together nicely. What side wins? You’ll have to read the book to find out!

I enjoyed this book. Overall, the book made a lot of sense and the story flowed nicely. There weren’t any huge gaps in logic, and overall I enjoyed the characterizations. Asimov tried to tie any book that took place on Earth or Trantor somehow into the universe of the Foundation, which actually really bothered me. Some of them made sense, but others were only very vaguely tied in and were completely ancillary to the story line. I’m looking forward to Foundation and Earth, which is the next book. Alan’s been reading the books after me and he’s enjoying them as well.

 

Douglas Coupland - Girlfriend In A Coma

Douglas Coupland - Girlfriend In A Coma


Douglas Coupland’s novel Girlfriend in a Coma is probably the darkest of his novels that I have read. It tells the story of a group of friends growing up in Vancouver, from the late 70s until the late 90s. One of these friends, Karen, falls into a coma and awakes sixteen years later to find her friends (and her new daughter) are living surface-level, superficial, lonely lives.

This book is divided into three parts: The first part talks about the time between Karen going into her coma and her return from the coma. The second part talks about Karen’s reintegration into the world, especially regarding the relationships between her and her daughter Megan, and her and Megan’s father, Richard. The third part talks about the group’s lives after the apocolypse, an event Karen predicted weeks earlier, where the rest of the citizens of earth simply fell asleep and died.

I really like Douglas Coupland’s writing, and this book was not an exception. Though it is bleak at times, it is very funny as well, and he does an excellent job with his characterizations.

 

Arthur C Clarke - Childhood's End

Arthur C Clarke - Childhood's End


A fleet of highly advanced aliens come to earth in peace. They allow the people of earth to mostly continue on the paths they have chosen, with a few exceptions. All war ceases. Scientific inquiry is allowed to flourish with the exception of space travel, religions slowly peter out. After a couple of decades, the human race has mostly been pacified and domesticated. The overlords are essentially benevolent non-dictators and their presence is mostly a positive one. Society seems almost Utopian. And then the damn humans have to go and mess it all up, because people can’t stand Utopian societies. They always go wrong.

Childhood’s End is a really fun book. The alien overlords seem nice and mostly harmless, and even though the plot isn’t exceptionally shocking, it flows at a nice pace and keeps one interested. I like how there was a Trojan giant squid that didn’t really seem to further the plot line at all, and how a Ouija board played a central part in the major turn in the plot. It was good.

This book was my first Arthur C. Clarke, and from it, I would definitely read more.

 

Ray Bradbury - The Martian Chronicles

Ray Bradbury - The Martian Chronicles


Just finished Ray Bradbury‘s classic The Martian Chronicles. It’s a collection of short stories revolving around a general storyline: the early colonization of Mars through the settlement and then eventual desertion of Mars.
Though I found it tough to get through some of the stories, I liked the general storyline, and the stories picked up my interest in the last few stories, where Earth went to war with itself and was destroyed.

This book wasn’t one of my favourites of Bradbury’s. I would recommend someone new to Bradbury’s work to instead pick up Dandelion Wine, or Something Wicked This Way Comes. I think I still like Isaac Asimov more.

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