AUTHOR: Douglas
CouplandDATE: November 2010
NOTES: This was my first
Coupland novel. It was donated to our house book shelf by a good friend and his girl after the last Regina Folk Festival. Both of its original owners are x-
Christians. I mention this because it seems to have a bearing on why it was donated to me.
I should begin by saying that I really enjoyed this book. Usually I am a very slow reader but I finished this read in less than a week.
Coupland writes in a similar style to my other favorite authors Nick
Hornby and Michael
Chabon. What I mean is that he writes minimally with a real focus on his characters and their voices. He writes the way his characters would talk (this book was mostly first person accounts). By doing this you feel like you get to know the characters personally.
An interesting feature of this book is that
Coupland was able to write around a central event from four very different voices. The event was a Columbine like school shooting in which the first speaker, Cheryl, is a
victim. Cheryl ends up recounting her short life story from the after-life. In this first section we find out that Cheryl belonged to a small Christian group at her
high school and that she had secretly married her
high school sweetheart to bypass the moral
barrier of premarital relations. We also learn that she was pregnant and that she did not whole
heartily buy into the predominant feelings of the group regarding faith. She gives the impression that she and Jason were somehow above the group. Cheryl becomes an icon in the aftermath of the
massacre because she had scrolled, "God is nowhere - God is now here" on her binder, by doing this Cheryl effectively became a martyr, although she herself claims that it was nothing more than an
exercise in mindless scribbling.
Jason is Cheryl's secret husband and he gains post
massacre fame because he is
falsely suspected of being the mastermind behind the shootings. The reason that Jason is suspected is
circumstantial and I don't want to give it all away but I will say that
Cheryl's murder is thought to be the motive. Although Jason is legally cleared he is still suspected by the public and this fact coupled with the death of his unborn child and wife has an understandably detrimental impact on his life. We meet up with Jason ten years after the shooting as he records his story on pink bank receipts.
The third speaker is connected to the
massacre through her relationship to Jason. Heather becomes
Jason's partner after a meeting at Toy
s R Us (Jason is buying toys for his sons which he
conceived with his dead brothers wife on the night of his brothers tragic death so that she could claim them as his brothers [the plot thickens]). Heather and Jason create an imaginary world with characters
based on toys and animals in which Jason is able to communicate vicariously. Eventually Jason
disappears under suspicious
circumstances and the Heather spends much of the remainder of her chapter consulting a medium who claims to hear the characters voices. You will have to read the book to see what that bit is all about.
The last character in the book is Jason's Dad, Reg. Reg spends the majority of the book as a strict fundamentalist Christian. He accuses Jason of Murder after the school shooting and he announces that because Jason's "brothers sons" are twins that one of them is more than likely without a soul. Nearing the end of the novel Reg undergoes a pretty significant change and the reader ends up feeling sympathy for him. Again I will let you read the book to discover what I mean.
Like I said, the book was well written and captivating. I think
Coupland is sympathetic to his characters and the world he creates feels realistic. I think that one of his motives for writing this book was to communicate a sort of non-faith that is tempting to readers in my age group.
Coupland does not say that there is no God but he does create an atmosphere of scepticism in his novel. The reader is lead to ask where God is during tragedy. Each of the characters struggles with faith and it seems that
Coupland encourages the questioning as an end. The characters in the novel who have firm beliefs are painted as
naive and in some cases dangerous. It is hard to explain but the novel just leaves you feeling sad and a little bit lost. I think that this was what
Coupland wanted so I would say that he achieved his goal.
Over all this was a good read and it has sparked some really good conversation with people I know.