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Book Loot: Week Ending May 2nd, 2010

A warning to all, especially those on self-imposed book buying bans, this post features an obscene amount of books. First, some ebay packages arrived. Then I found out one of my favourite secondhand bookstores in the city was going out of business and selling all their books for $1. Yes, $1. I set myself a modest limit of $20 and let loose, coming out with only (cough, only? My shoulder and hands disagree) 19 books. The day after the sale ended, my sister happened to be wandering by and they were chucking books into a dumpster; she scored some really good stuff too.

And then, yes, that’s just my loot from during the week, there was Clunes. I came well under budget, spending much less than I thought I would. It was a great day, lovely surrounds and buildings, a good vibe, a few friendly dogs and lots of books.  Here’s my haul:

And, a few interesting articles from the week:

Book Loot: Week Ending April 18th, 2010

This Year's Summer ReadingI know! I said I wouldn’t be buying any books until Clunes, but as luck would have it I found myself in a secondhand bookstore this week. Thinking I wouldn’t find anything I would want to buy, just intending to have a browse around and waste some time – I’m really good at self deception, it would seem – but found a few books that begged to be bought home with me.

My Mum returned from the U.S.A. this week and she brought with her a bounty of gifts, including the Tintin and Capone books above. The Capone book looks really fascinating, stuffed with actual documents from the gangster’s time at Alcatraz. She also visited the set of Gilmore Girls at Warner Brothers Studio, which was exciting enough when she was telling me all about it, but then she pulled out a t-shirt with the logo for Luke’s Diner on it – I may have cried a little bit. As well as all this, she took a passing snapshot of the famous City Lights bookstore in San Francisco for me, what a champ!

It’s been a really strange week. Two bouts of sickness that hit me out of nowhere, and a major computer malfunction thanks to Microsoft which meant I had to completely reinstall Windows and reformat everything. Luckily nothing was lost, but it was still a bit of a pain. The week wasn’t all bad news though, I found out that I’m going to be getting more hours and new responsibilities at the bookstore from next week. Always good, and hopefully it means a big paycheck due just in time for Clunes.

[image credit: "This Year's Summer Reading" by flickr user ephemera assemblyman]

Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture by Douglas Coupland (1991)

Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture by Douglas Coupland (1991)Whenever I feel myself succumbing to dangerous levels of loathing and doubt, burnt out by all the culture offered up so graciously to me as a target market, I reach for the old favourites, the comfort reads. In doing this, however, there is always a hidden anxiety: what if we’ve grown apart? What if the changes of the years apart have caused irreperable damage to our relationship? What if we just don’t click like we used to? I first read Generation X in my first year of university, gleeful at the contents of the multiple university libraries which had so many books I’d always wanted to read but local and school libraries never stocked. I don’t exactly recall my initial reaction, but I’ve since devoured everything else Douglas Coupland has written, so I imagine it must have been fairly positive. So, I dug out my copy of the neon pink covered Generation X and, despite the fear and possibility of disappointment, got stuck into it.

The carapace of coolness is too much for Claire, also. She breaks the silence by saying that it’s not healthy to live our life as a succession of isolated little cool moments. “Either our lives become stories, or there’s just no way to get through them.”
I agree. Dag agrees. We know that this is why the three of us left our lives behind us and came to the desert – to tell stories and to make our lives worthwhile tales in the process.

I’m not sure if back in 2003 I quite would have appreciated the blunt truths offered in Coupland’s novel, those moments of acidic humour that cut to the core of post-war Western consumer existence. Let’s face it, I was eighteen with the whole world ahead of me and still believed I was on the cusp of immersing myself in a world of thoughts and ideas that would open up numerous opportunities that I couldn’t even fathom. Uh, yeah. But now, with most (oh my god) of my twenties behind me, I come to Generation X with a different perspective, from the point where you’re no longer “the youth” anymore, and a new generation is fast usurping your own (which you never quite felt apart of anyway), and you realize that although you’re supposed to be an adult, you have no fucking idea what you’re supposed to be doing.

And for this particularly knotty stage of life, Generation X is perfect. Admittedly, there are some differences between the generation of the characters of the novel and my own – theirs is a landscape noticeably untouched by the internet, although the comic frames and neologisms within the text do point toward that sort of multi-textuality that we’d become used to with the growth of the internet; and if this is an accelerated culture, what can we say about ours, hyper-acceleration? (an issue Coupland would expand upon in 2009′s Generation A) – but the general sense of distrust of consumer culture, of apathy and exhaustion, of alienation and of the unknown, still resonates strongly, perhaps the byproduct of mid-twenties malaise no matter the generational setting. Here there is the pleasure of small recognitions of self and experience which legitimize those experiences and perceptions, or at the very least, offer the consolation that you are not alone in sensing the strangeness, the contradictory and the futile.

But I get this feeling–
It is a feeling that our emotions, while wonderful, are transpiring in a vacuum, and I think it boils down to the fact that we’re middle class.
You see, when you’re middle class, you have to live with the fact that history will ignore you. You have to live with the fact that history can never champion your causes and that history will never feel sorry for you. It is the price that is paid for day-to-day comfort and silence. And because of this price, all happinesses are sterile; all sadnesses go unpitied.
And any small moment of intense, flaring beauty such as this morning’s will be utterly forgotten, dissolved by time like a super-8 film left out in the rain, without sound, and quickly replaced by thousands of silently growing trees.

Okay, so that’s all my guts spewed up in words for all to see, but what about the actual novel? Generation X features three twenty-somethings, Andy, Dag and Claire, who have removed themselves from their peers and their expectations to work menial jobs in California, where they tell stories to each other, revealing truths about themselves and their lives through fiction and an extensive frame of cultural reference and understanding, in this way being able to openly speak about and simultaneously cover up the unspeakable fears they hold about where their lives are headed. It’s not all doom and generational gloom, but it’s also sharp and funny. While Generation X hails the power of stories and fiction to give us control over our lives, I wonder whether the search for our own narrative is also the very thing that entangles us with this distinct anxiety and alienation, especially when our narratives don’t measure up to those we see in film, television, literature, internet, other people?

What have I learned from this rereading experience? That Generation X and I have not grown apart, nor are we disgusted by our slight changes over time, but that we are closer than ever, a sort of book and reader eclipse in which our stories begin to overlap. It may not always be this way, we’ve both got a lot of changing to do yet, but for now, the pages between these blindingly neon covers are of the greatest comfort.

Book Loot: Week Ending October 11th, 2009

A few ebay purchases arrived this week, a pay day and an unusually restrained visit to the Federation Square book market.

Book Loot: Week Ending October 11th 2009

This week I’ve been reading The Sandman comics/graphic novels/whatever your preferred term of endearment/books by Neil Gaiman. Immensely enjoyable, but I don’t feel adequate reviewing them, I don’t know how to speak about them. Maybe a summary post when I finish all of them off? I’ve also just started Truman Capote’s first published novel, Other Voices, Other Rooms. Although, I am expecting McCullers’ unfinished autobiography – Illumination and Night Glare – to arrive this week and I can see myself ignoring everything else and devouring that quite easily in a day or so. I don’t really know what I’ll find myself reading next.

How do you choose what to read next? Do you plan your reading ahead of time, knowing what book you will be picking up next, or do you act solely on instinct?

Book Loot: Week Ending September 27th, 2009

Brace yourself, dear readers.

I didn’t buy any books (gasp! shock! horror!) so I have nothing to report on the rabid book-buyer front this week. Instead, seeing it feels as though it has been a while between reviews, I’ll quickly chat about what I have been reading. I’m working my way through Alan Warner’s Morvern Callar, which, despite it’s heavy use of a Scottish accented prose and slang and a generally downbeat demeanour, is keeping my attention. That is, when that attention isn’t being distracted by Hunter S. Thompson with Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail 72. H.S.T. is managing to captivate me and get me involved in the American politics of 37 years ago with his outlandish wit and fierce mockery of the system. I’ve still got some Chuck Palahniuk books to read, but I think maybe the Palahniuk wave has crashed and I might be a bit over it? I’ll see how I feel when I finish these two books.

I started watching the first season of Mad Men this week, and the incredibly handsome Jon Hamm has me really wanting to read/reread some Jack Kerouac. Anyone else think Hamm would make a great Kerouac if someone had the lack of decency to make a film version of his life? Speaking of Mad Men, here’s me and Don Draper at an after-work rendezvous via the way too much fun on a boring Sunday afternoon at work Mad Men Yourself:

So, Don, what have you been reading?

So, Don, what have you been reading?

Ahem. Cartoon vanity and daydreams of meeting some dashing Don Draper look-a-like over a cocktail or two aside, here are some bookish articles that I found interesting this week. Douglas Coupland writing for the Guardian on his personal circumstances while he wrote Generation X:

“And so I started to write the book. I remember spending my days almost dizzy with loneliness and feeling like I’d sold the family cow for three beans. I suppose it was this crippling loneliness that gave Gen X its bite. I was trying to imagine a life for myself on paper that certainly wasn’t happening in reality. In the book there was the idea that people marooned in life could unmaroon themselves by telling stories to each other. That still seems to me to be a valid way of seeing the world. There was also the notion that telling stories was a way of coping with information overload – hence the book’s subtitle, Tales for an Accelerated Culture. In 1989, information overload meant 50 TV stations instead of 10, as well as push-button phones instead of rotary dial phones – quaint now, but back then it felt real. What was really going on with the writing of X was, I suspect, the use of storytelling as a form of creative pattern recognition from which clues to psychic survival might erupt. That’s possibly what storytelling is in a large sense, and it’s what I do for a living, the most recent evidence of which is Generation A, a follow-up to X where the cultural acceleration experienced by the characters is palpable rather than theoretical.”

Heather Dent over at PopMatters writes a reflective eulogy for Hunter S. Thompson:

“For generation after generation, Thompson rocked/rocks/will rock the dominant paradigm, describes our national character; corruption, inequality, mediocrity, freedom and fun, Fear and Loathing. His words, all the more relevant today, continue to delight and rattle us.”

Over at the New York Times, Arthur Krystal contemplates writers who appear to be terrible conversationalists.

And, finally, in my constant search for news, articles and basically anything of interest regarding Carson McCullers, Google News search turned up a review of a bar in Portland, The Press Club, which has a selection of crêpes named after authors. It appears that the owners have some good taste in literature as one of the crêpes is named after McCullers and I’m curious about how they decided that this particular combination of ingredients – “mozzarella, mushrooms, red peppers, and spinach” – represented Carson McCullers? In lieu of a ticket to Portland, I’m tempted to try and create my own version of crêpe à la Carson and report back on my findings.

Book Loot: Week Ending September 20th, 2009

Book Loot: Week Ending September 20th, 2009

Book Loot: Week Ending September 20th, 2009

A very small loot indeed this week!

Oh, 3 for 2 Popular Penguin deal, you’re just too good! My copy of Brideshead is a bit battered – but it’s also a Penguin orange edition, from 1951. 1951! So, a replacement/extra copy was much needed. I started reading Dunces a few years ago, but never got around to finishing it, I think I had to return it to the library before I was done. And, I don’t think I’ve ever been as ecstatic over a book as I was when I received a review copy of Douglas Coupland’s upcoming release in the mail. Very exciting!

Generation A by Douglas Coupland (2009)

Generation A by Douglas Coupland

Generation A by Douglas Coupland

Generation A is the story of five previously unconnected individuals living some time in the near future in which bees are extinct. They become minor celebrities, and their lives begin to change and merge after they each get stung. I make no secret of the fact that I am a huge fan of Coupland’s writing. He manages to pick out the seemingly minor aspects of our culture and imbue them with humour, cynicism and hope. Despite his more recent output not nearly reaching the heights of his early 1990s work, a new Coupland is always something to look forward to.

In Generation A Coupland manages to capture the essence of the isolation of virtual existence. Connections are made, but they are temporary. All of the characters here are technologically savvy – engaging in new forms of web 2.0 memes, creating fake commerce sites that become instant internet sensations or playing World of Warcraft – however, rather than the utopian ideal of this new form of communication bringing them into the greater social fabric of the world, it isolates them. Julien, a young French student who never attends class frequently describes his disgust and hatred of the physicality of the world, as compared to his “ideal reality” in World of Warcraft.

“I saw how each of us led lives that were deeply isolated in their own ways. I think the modern world isolates people – that’s its job – but there are so many different ways to be lost and there was a unity to the texture of all our lives when the stingers went in.” (Diana)

The introduction of a powerful fictional drug – the phenomenally successful Solon – which induces in its users a sensation of contented solitude further drives the message against social isolation while simultaneously critiquing the current appetite for potent medication, both legal and illegal. These themes, however heavy and contemporaneously relevant, are immersed in Coupland’s traditional prose style, heavy on references to common pop cultural experiences and illuminating humour.

“When I was still pretending to go to the Sorbonne, I took a class called Heroes and the Monomyth. The moment I started attending, I simply stopped caring about grades or anything else. I decided that knowledge comes from real life and from travel and interacting with others. So I decided to spend all of my awake time playing World of Warcraft. How amazing to see all that mythology acting itself out in real time, fuelled by genuine human sentience!” (Julien)

Coupland focuses on how shared experience can create a genuine desire for social, human connection, and how the act of telling stories figures into these connections. As the five are brought together in a unique, twisted form of group therapy under the guidance of scientist Serge, their act of transforming their current situation via the method of reframing them into fictional narratives allows them to come to a greater understanding of themselves. Generation A acts as a suckerpunch of a wake up call to contemporary society, while offering a cast of colourful characters and some unexpected plot twists. Cynical, but with a strong sense of hope that things can (and must) change.

Generation A will be released in Australia on October 1. Many thanks to the good folk at Random House Australia for providing me with a review copy.

Douglas Coupland on the “Cut and Paste” Generation

Douglas Coupland

Douglas Coupland

Just for a bit of a change of pace, here’s a link to an interview with Douglas Coupland from The Guardian. I find it so fascinating just how ubiquitous his phrase/concept/idea of Generation X has become, how ingrained it is in our cultural understanding. Every other day in the conservative mainstream Australian media there is an article setting up the generational differences between the X & Y generations. I think the Coupland’s conception of generation X has become much larger than his entire body of work, he captured the zeitgeist I suppose, but lately it has just become more relevant – or an easy way of establishing otherwise difficult to pinpoint differences between the age groups. Anyway, Coupland definitely has a unique perspective on life, and he has some interesting views of the future. Here he touches upon an issue I feel strongly about (and yes, I can see the humour in me copying and pasting this particular snippet of his interview):

“I like it that people are smarter, that every-one can find facts quicker, and it does make people more interesting. But what happens – and this is the thing I’m not really sure about – when it comes to the point where people don’t actually do anything any more? They just cut and paste from things that happened in the past. You can’t download getting your hands dirty. Younger people don’t think that way, they wouldn’t mourn the passing of a manual universe – it’s just ridiculous to even think about for them – so they’ll miss something you and I have experienced. But they’ll have something else they’ve experienced too, so, um …” He tails away, lost in thought.

Obviously he is talking about the internet, but also how delicately subjective experience is. His new novel, Generation A, is released in September, and in October for Australian readers.

Just something for you to muse over on a Monday evening, an excerpt from Life After God:

I thought of how every day each of us experiences a few little moments that have just a bit more resonance than other moments – we hear a word that sticks in our min-or maybe we have a small experience that pulls us out of ourselves, if only briefly-we share a hotel elevator with a bride in her veils, say, or a stranger gives us a piece of bread to feed to the mallard ducks in the lagoon; a small child starts a conversation with us in a Dairy Queen-or we have an episode like the one I had with the M&M cars back at the Husky station.

And if we were to collect these small moments in a notebook and save them over a period of months we would see certain trends emerge from our collection-certain voices would emerge that have been trying to speak through us. We would realize that we have been having another life altogether, one we didn’t even know was going on inside us. And maybe this other life is more important than the one we think of as being real-this clunky day-to-day world of furniture and noise and metal. So just maybe it is these small silent moments which are the true story-making events of our lives.