|   | Generation 
        X (1991)  Coupland's works focus on the experiences of young people 
        in contemporary North American society. The novel Generation X 
        is the story of Andy, Clair, and Dag, three "twenty-somethings" 
        who live Palm Springs. Overeducated for their current jobs, the three 
        are disillusioned by the greediness, exploitation, and frenzied pace they 
        experience in the corporate worlds. In an attempt to keep themselves entertained, 
        Andy, Clair and Dag tell each other stories ranging from fantastic to 
        the tragic. In addition to describing his characters' lives, Coupland 
        also incorporates into Generation X numerous sayings and definitions 
        which are printed along the margin of each page. For example, he coins 
        such phrases as "Eroticize Intelligence" and "Re-Invent 
        the Middle Class," and defines "Lessness as "philosophy 
        whereby one reconciles oneself to diminishing expectations."
 Shampoo Planet 
        (1992)  While Generation X centers on "twenty-somethings," 
        Shampoo Planet focuses on the teenagers of the 1990s, or, according 
        to Coupland, "The Global Teens." The protangonist of the story, 
        Tyler Johnson, is torn between his desire to become part of affluent, 
        corporate life and what he sees as his personal responsibility to save 
        the environment and make the world a better place in which to live.
 Life After 
        God (1994)  In his short story collection, Life 
        after God, Coupland shifts his attention back to the "twenty-somethings" 
        to address religious and spiritual concerns. In the epigraph to this work, 
        Coupland writes, "You are the first generation to be raised without 
        religion," and the stories in the collection often portray characters 
        filled with hopelessness, despair, and lack of faith. The story "1,000 
        Years (Life after God)," for example, centers on a man who decides 
        to stop taking the medication prescribed for his depression. While not 
        necessarily religious, the man ultimately realizes: "I need God to 
        help me give, because I no longer seem capable of giving ... to help me 
        to love, as I seem beyond being able to love." Coupland also addresses 
        such issues as divorce, nuclear annhilation, and the pain of romantic 
        love in this volume.
 Microserfs 
        (1995)  Microserfs: 
        a hilarious, fanatically detailed, and oddly moving book about a handful 
        of misfit Microsoft employees who realized they don't have lives and subsequently 
        become determined to get lives inside the lightning-paced world of high-tech 
        1990s American geek culture. Coupland gives readers an intimate, deadly 
        accurate, and very funny view of a way of life that is quickly becoming 
        the dominant way of life: friends, families, and lovers falling through 
        the trapdoors of the new electronic order and becoming involved in an 
        engaging, awkward scarmble toward love and success in a brave new world.
 Polaroids 
        from the Dead (1996)  Douglas Coupland takes his sparkling literary talent in a 
        new direction with this crackling collection of takes on life and death 
        in North America - from his sweeping portrait of Grateful Dead culture 
        to the deaths of Marilyn Monroe, Kurt Cobain and the middle class. For 
        years, Coupland's razor-sharp insights into what it means to be human 
        in an age of technology have garnered the highest praise from fans and 
        critics alike. At last, Coupland has assembled a wide variety of stories 
        and personal "postcards" about the pivotal people and places 
        that have defined our modern lives. Polaroids from the Dead is 
        a skillful combination of stories, fact and fiction - keen outtakes on 
        life in the late twentieth century, exploring the recent past and a society 
        obsessed with celebrity, crime and death. Princess Diana, Nicole Brown 
        Simpson and Madonna are but some of the people scrutinized herein. By 
        turns hugely funny, savagely ironic and poignantly searching, this collection 
        has appeal for everyone cognizant of the first half of this decade and 
        looking for navigation in the second.
 Girlfriend 
        in a Coma (1998)  After 
        making love for the first time, high school senior Karen Ann McNeil confides 
        to her boyfriend, Richard, of the dark visions she's been suffering recently. 
        It's only a few hours later on that snowy Saturday night in 1979 that 
        she descends into a coma. Nine months after that, she gives birth to a 
        daughter, Megan, her child by Richard. Karen remains comatose for the 
        next 18 years. Richard and her circle of friends reside in an emotional 
        purgatory throughout the next two decades, passing through careers as 
        models, film special-effects technicians, doctors and demolition experts 
        before finally being reunited while working on a conspiracy-driven supernatural 
        series. Upon Karen's reawakening, life grows as surreal as the television 
        show. Strange, apocalyptic events begin to occur. Later, amid the world's 
        rubble, Karen, Richard and their friends attempt to restore their own 
        humanity.
 Lara's Book: 
        Lara Croft and the Tomb Raider Phenomenon (1998)  Lara's 
        Book chronicles the amazing popularity of Lara Croft (the lovely leading 
        lady of the Tomb Raider series). Douglas Coupland gves his thoughts on 
        the phenomenon and an original story about Lara. The book also includes 
        thousands of pictures of Lara from around the world, some never before 
        seen in print. Plus, strategy guide author Kip Ward has created new gameplay 
        strategies Tomb Raider, Tomb Raider II, and Tomb Raider Gold for exclusive 
        release in Lara's Book.
 Miss Wyoming 
        (1999)   Susan 
        is a former child-beauty-pageant contender. John is a hard-living movie 
        producer. She walks away from a plane crash without so much as a scratch. 
        He comes away from a near-death experience with a unique, vivid plan. 
        Susan refuses to spend one more day peddling herself for cheesy TV sitcom 
        parts and takes advantage of a very weird situation to disappear. John 
        turns his back on a hedonistic life making blockbuster action flicks. 
        Shedding their self-made identities, each sets out on an uncharted course 
        across the Gap-clogged, strip-mall landscape of California, searching 
        for the thing--Love--that neither has ever really known, but that they 
        now think they just might, actually, desperately want. Assisting Susan 
        and John are a blackmailing pageant mom, a pair of suburban eggheads, 
        a rust-belt refugee, and a salad bar of other twentieth-century Americans 
        who all share the dream of one day taking center stage.
 City of Glass 
        (2000)  A 
        stylish little book of text and image in which Douglas Coupland captures 
        the essence of his home town, Vancouver. The world sees Vancouver as a 
        beautiful city harbouring a special secret -- a snowboarding Pacific sphinx, 
        brash and free of historical luggage. The city is also the birthplace 
        of cultural phenomena such as Greenpeace, cyberpunk, the schism of Generation 
        X, The X Files and now, Culture Jamming. So -- what is Vancouver really 
        like? What does Vancouver feel like from the inside? Electric, provocative, 
        witty and, above all, eerily perceptive, here is Vancouver inside out, 
        from the Grouse Grind to glass towers, First Nations to feng-shui, Kitsilano 
        to Cantonese. Here's life in the social laboratory of extreme politics 
        and extreme sports, where Europe meets Asia meets indigenous, and where 
        the notion of Paradise at the end of a Canadian rainbow is rewritten every 
        day. Coupland's 25,000-word text, broken up into 49 personal categories, 
        is matched with a like number of images reflecting the unexpected city: 
        archival photographs, "beauty" shots, images from internationally known 
        photo-artists, and ephemera such as Campbell's soup cans with Cantonese/English/French 
        labels ( ... the only such cans in the world). Full of inimitable insights, 
        this unique little book is designed by Coupland and Vancouver's Judith 
        Steedman in the manner of underground Japanese magazines. Unlike any take 
        on Vancouver that anyone has seen before, Coupland's exploration of his 
        home city will intrigue his broad and growing international audience.
 All Families 
        are Psychotic (2001)  The 
        most disastrous family reunion in the history of fiction. The last time 
        the wildly dysfunctional Dummond family of Vancouver got together, gunplay 
        was on the menu. Only the fact that their one shining star, Sarah the 
        astronaut, is about to be launched into space at Cape Canaveral tempts 
        them to try togetherness again. The state of Florida may never recover 
        from the Drummonds' version of fun in the sun. Everyone tries really hard 
        to get along. But when the reformed wastrel and oldest brother Wade sets 
        out to help his estranged dad out of a financial jam, he sets in motion 
        a hilarious series of mishaps and coincidences that spins quickly out 
        of control. The story unfolds at lightning speed, hurling the Drummonds 
        apart with the energy of a rocket blast. Adultery, hostage-taking, a purloined 
        letter, heart attacks at Disney World, bankruptcy, addiction, blackmarket 
        negotiations-Coupland piles on one deft and comic plot twist after another, 
        leaving you reaching for your seat-belt and waiting for the crash. When 
        the crash comes, it is surprisingly sweet.
 Note: 
        Major Works is partly reprinted from Contemporary Literary Criticism. 
        I claim no copyright over it.  Works of 
        Coupland by othersMasayo Ogura 
        (Japanese)  
        Generation 
          X Translated 
          by Hisashi Kuroma (One of the most popular translators in Japan. Now 
          deceased.). Published by Kadokawa-Shoten in 1992. Shampoo 
          Planet Translated 
          by Yoshinobu Morita. Published by Kadokawa-Shoten in 1995. Life 
          after God (In the Desert) Translated 
          by Ken-ichi Eguchi. (Literary Magazine SUBARU May, 1994) Published by 
          Shueisha.  |