GENERATION A
By Douglas Coupland
With the echo in its title of Generation X, the book that launched
Douglas Coupland's career, Generation A might suggest a lot of different
things, running the gamut from closure to renewal. What the title, which comes
from a 1994 commencement speech made by Kurt Vonnegut, really signifies,
however, is a weariness with brands and labels in general. And, at the same time,
an inability to move beyond what they represent.
Set sometime in the near future, the story begins with five
people being stung by bees. Though they seem like random
global citizens - three men and two women hailing from Canada, the United States,
France, Sri Lanka and New Zealand - they are in fact the usual Coupland
suspects: young, hip, disaffected types who are at odds with modern life (and
who naturally all speak perfect English). They may hail
from the four corners of the world, but they are essentially interchangeable parts.
Coupland's world is nothing if not flat, so flat that in this book he even shows
it being made into an "Earth sandwich" via cellphone.
Like most Coupland heroes, they are the kind of regular people interesting things
aren't supposed to happen to. And then they do. Getting stung by bees, thought to
be extinct, is the
equivalent to being touched by the hand of God. All five instant-celebrity "Wonka
children" are soon whisked away by helicopters to secret government
research labs. They are, in fact, twice removed
from all the usual material reality of modern life: first to their bubble-like
quarantine cells (where the brand names of all the products in their rooms have
been removed and they aren't even allowed to watch TV), then to the remote and just as
culturally isolated island of Haida Gwaii off the coast of
British Columbia, where they sit around telling each other stories as part of a
mysterious pseudo-scientific experiment.
The rationale for all of this maneuvering is complicated, with the only prize
for figuring it out being the realization that it doesn't make any sense.
Nevertheless, at least through its first half the novel moves quickly, and offers
up some clever observations on drugs, celebrity, the internet, and what
the end of the world is going to look like. But Coupland's novels have a habit
of getting carried off on a wave of escalating silliness. In this respect Generation
A most closely resembles Girlfriend In a Coma, another apocalyptic
tale that got out of hand. His best books, like The Gum Thief, stay closer to
home. What makes things even worse here is the way the book stalls when it moves to Haida Gwaii, as
none of the stories that are told are very interesting, or even particularly relevant
to the rest of what's going on.
Instead of an end or a beginning, Generation A feels like it is only
marking time.
Notes:
Review first published March 20, 2010.
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