2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
Generation A, Mar 29 2007
Douglas Coupland created the name of an entire generation in "Generation X," with his look at the lives of disaffected twentysomethings, in lives that lack an indefinable something. Witty, incisive and intelligent, Coupland's debut is still an outstanding read long after the original twentysomethings are twentysomething no more.
Three twentysomethings -- Andy, Claire, and Dag -- first encounter each other in the California desert, far from their original homes. All three are "underemployed, overeducated, intensely private, and unpredictable," and they are adrift in life -- they want meaning in their lives, but they don't know what it is or how to find it.
Disgruntled by the soulles pop culture, they've all left the world behind in favor of a non-rat-race life. They take up unrewarding minimum-wage "McJobs," and form a little Platonic circle that tells stories about themselves and the future, giving insights into what drove them to that place in the first place.
"Generation X" is one of those rare books that takes on the problems of youth with genuine intelligence. No matter how many curmudgeons say that "kids today have it easy," each generation has its own problems and challenges, including ones of the soul. It's those problems that Coupland seeks to address here.
That intelligent edge has gotten the book labelled pretentious, but if anything it lacks pretension. Coupland is frank and upfront, both about his "slacker" protagonists, and in the attitude he has toward the world. He tackles the insecurities and dissatisfactions of youth, and how the people who came of age in the early 1990s struggled with the concept of a society in flux. They were too old to be innocent, too young to be fully benumbed.
Coupland's writing is rougher here than in his later novels like "Shampoo Nation" and "Girlfriend in a Coma." But it has his usual wry zing and offbeat style, stripped down to a mass of details and thoughts, and the ability to look at how the masses worry about things that don't really matter. He's cynical and dark in places, but has a certain downbeat optimism as well.
Douglas Coupland's debut has a languid, downbeat beauty about it. And the insightful "Generation X" is still a modern classic, with something to say to any generation.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars
Against Douglas Coupland, May 22 2010
Douglas Coupland's cynicism is convulted and shallow and while I can see what some people can get out of his writing I see far more potential in reading "fin-de-siecle'' existentialist writers like musil, gombrowicz, broch, whom are terribly more interesting than Coupland with his cheap irony, and his gimmicky pseudo-post-modernism. Chuck Paliniuk also falls under this category. So while i was first disturbed by the amount of people calling this book boring, dismissing it as the problem of the reader, I now fully sympathize with their inability to appreciate coupland's writing.
There are too many terrific books to waste time on this overrated work.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
The Gen-X manifesto, Mar 13 2010
Maybe because I am a Gen-Xer, I loved this book. It captures the drifting meaninglessness that was the hallmark of coming of age as in the 80s. So often misunderstood, painted as the "me generation", Gen-X had to bridge the grandiose expectations of the Boomers and the famine of possibilities that was leftover.
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