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Book cover of Polaroids from the Dead
Fiction, Essays, Traditional/Roots Rock, Music - General & Miscellaneous, Rock & Roll

Polaroids from the Dead

by Douglas Coupland
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Overview

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 Kurt Cobain, Marilyn Monroe 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 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 20th 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.

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 Kurt Cobain, Marilyn Monroe and the middle class.

Synopsis

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 Kurt Cobain, Marilyn Monroe 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 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 20th 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.

Charles Taylor

Truman Capote dismissed Jack Kerouac's writing as mere "typing." What would he have called Douglas Coupland's? Typesetting, probably. Or maybe art design. Coupland's new book of essays, Polaroids from the Dead, comes in a micro coffee-table size, perfect for subway reading or displaying next to fanned-out back issues of Wired. Its pages of observations appear in large, fussily neat print, interrupted by photos ranging from newspaper shots to calendar art which, printed in black and white, herald a new style: tabloid kitsch. And to top it all off, the whole thing comes wrapped in a satiny dust jacket from which, in a silver gelatin print, Sharon Tate peers out, the picture-perfect retro victim, a symbol of Coupland's cross-generational impulses, and his chic. Tate has been chosen over her contemporary equivalent, Nicole Brown Simpson, the way, while shopping, someone might choose a vintage Nehru jacket over a new blazer.

If I dwell on the book's design, it's because Coupland's writing is all about presentation, his thinking about people and places rarely going beneath the surfaces of dress, manner and speech. In these essays, Doug (that's how he signs himself in the prologue) comes off as a cross between the happy-face computer screen that appears when you switch on a Mac and the arms trying to break through the TV in the movie "Videodrome." His message to his cyber-contemporaries is "reach out and touch somebody's hand." He replaces the stereotype of current youth as disaffected and apathetic with an older cliche: the slackers and hackers who wander through his work are just lost, bewildered darlings, Coupland tells us, as he radiates understanding and solace like St. Francis waiting for the pigeons to perch on his outstretched limbs. Speaking for youth, Coupland heads right for the most flowery sentiments of the '60s. The long opening piece on Deadheads concludes with this pearl: "At the heart of the sixties dream lies a core of truth, a germ that refuses to die, an essence of purity and love that is open to abuse . . . but without which Columbia could not live her own life peacefully."

In other pieces, Coupland toys with an irony so subtle that, like grappa, it evaporates the instant you taste it. A good thing, too, since otherwise we might see how cheap and easy it is. His conclusion to a rumination on the cannibalistic nature of modern celebrity is -- are you sitting down? -- fame and money don't ensure happiness. And if you don't believe that, just check out the author photo of Doug looking pensive and Diesel-ad gorgeous next to his Noguchi lamp and Eames chair. Maybe Coupland is working so fast (five books in five years) because, media savvy as he is, he suspects he's in for a short ride. His real contribution may be as the latest proof that every generation gets the fraud it deserves. -- Salon

About the Author, Douglas Coupland

Douglas Coupland was born on December 30, 1961, on a Canadian NATO base in West Germany. He grew up and lives in Vancouver, Canada.

Girlfriend in a Coma reestablishes Douglas Coupland as one of the most talented, engaging and important writers of his generation. Profoundly moving, darkly comic, this eerily prescient novel exploring questions of faith, decency and existence is set against the backdrop of a society hurtling toward the end of the century. As People magazine so deftly put it, "His voice still resonates with the generation he named."

He is the author of Generation X, Shampoo Planet, Life After God, and Microserfs.

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Editorials

Charles Taylor

Truman Capote dismissed Jack Kerouac's writing as mere "typing." What would he have called Douglas Coupland's? Typesetting, probably. Or maybe art design. Coupland's new book of essays, Polaroids from the Dead, comes in a micro coffee-table size, perfect for subway reading or displaying next to fanned-out back issues of Wired. Its pages of observations appear in large, fussily neat print, interrupted by photos ranging from newspaper shots to calendar art which, printed in black and white, herald a new style: tabloid kitsch. And to top it all off, the whole thing comes wrapped in a satiny dust jacket from which, in a silver gelatin print, Sharon Tate peers out, the picture-perfect retro victim, a symbol of Coupland's cross-generational impulses, and his chic. Tate has been chosen over her contemporary equivalent, Nicole Brown Simpson, the way, while shopping, someone might choose a vintage Nehru jacket over a new blazer.

If I dwell on the book's design, it's because Coupland's writing is all about presentation, his thinking about people and places rarely going beneath the surfaces of dress, manner and speech. In these essays, Doug (that's how he signs himself in the prologue) comes off as a cross between the happy-face computer screen that appears when you switch on a Mac and the arms trying to break through the TV in the movie "Videodrome." His message to his cyber-contemporaries is "reach out and touch somebody's hand." He replaces the stereotype of current youth as disaffected and apathetic with an older cliche: the slackers and hackers who wander through his work are just lost, bewildered darlings, Coupland tells us, as he radiates understanding and solace like St. Francis waiting for the pigeons to perch on his outstretched limbs. Speaking for youth, Coupland heads right for the most flowery sentiments of the '60s. The long opening piece on Deadheads concludes with this pearl: "At the heart of the sixties dream lies a core of truth, a germ that refuses to die, an essence of purity and love that is open to abuse . . . but without which Columbia could not live her own life peacefully."

In other pieces, Coupland toys with an irony so subtle that, like grappa, it evaporates the instant you taste it. A good thing, too, since otherwise we might see how cheap and easy it is. His conclusion to a rumination on the cannibalistic nature of modern celebrity is -- are you sitting down? -- fame and money don't ensure happiness. And if you don't believe that, just check out the author photo of Doug looking pensive and Diesel-ad gorgeous next to his Noguchi lamp and Eames chair. Maybe Coupland is working so fast (five books in five years) because, media savvy as he is, he suspects he's in for a short ride. His real contribution may be as the latest proof that every generation gets the fraud it deserves. -- Salon

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

A cult writer for the disaffected (Generation X), Coupland combines manic poetry and scary precision in his dazzling, deft takes on modern life and non-living. Illustrated with 42 b&w photographs, this collection of 24 mini-essays and short fictions (all but three of which ran in Spin, New Republic, etc.) opens with several pieces on a series of Grateful Dead concerts that will mainly interest Deadheads, but it picks up speed as Coupland roams the former East Berlin in 1994; files a bittersweet, sunset-drenched dispatch from the Bahamas; meditates on James Rosenquist's enormous pop painting F-111; visits the nuclear tourist sites of Los Alamos; and spies on yuppies and political consultants in seamy Washington, D.C. In Palo Alto and in his native Vancouver, Coupland celebrates middle-class stability, which he views as a fragile construct that shields us from our animal nature. The "secular nirvana" of Brentwood, Los Angeles, to him seems an inevitable site for the O.J. Simpson/Nicole Brown saga and for Marilyn Monroe's death. Coupland teaches survival of the hippest as the world plunges toward a "new thought-based economy."

Book Details

Published
October 1, 1997
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
208
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060987213

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