Bit rot Stories + essays

Douglas Coupland

Book - 2017

A provocative new collection of essays, stories and musings by the Canadian artist and best-selling author of Generation X explores the differences between the 20th century's ideas about the future and today's realities, sharing meditations on how humanity is making sense of a shifting consciousness.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

818.54/Coupland
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 818.54/Coupland Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Blue Rider Press 2017.
Language
English
Main Author
Douglas Coupland (author)
Physical Description
416 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9780399575808
  • Before We Begin ...
  • Vietnam
  • Black Goo
  • The Short, Brutal Life of the Channel Three News Team
  • Nine Readers
  • Nine Point Zero
  • Smells
  • Coffee & Cigarettes
  • Public Speaking
  • Shiny
  • Notes on Relationships in the Twenty-first Century
  • Fear of Windows
  • Creep
  • Stamped
  • Future Blips
  • Futurosity
  • Worcestershistershire
  • Bulk Memory
  • The Mell
  • The Anti-ghosts
  • Little Black Ghost
  • New Moods
  • Beef Rock
  • Globalization Is Fun!
  • Unclassy
  • Wonkr
  • Yield: A Story About Cornfields
  • The 2 1/2th Dimension
  • Living Big
  • The End of the Golden Age of Payphones
  • The Ones That Got Away
  • 666!
  • Dueling Duals
  • George Washington's Extreme Makeover
  • George Washington's Extreme Makeover (pilot script)
  • Pot
  • Got a Life
  • Peace
  • iF-iW eerF
  • Stuffed
  • Superman and the Kryptonite Martinis
  • McWage
  • Lotto
  • Frugal
  • Zoë Hears the Truth
  • IQ
  • My TV
  • The Preacher and His Mistress
  • 5,149 Days Ago: Air Travel Post-9/11
  • Glide
  • Klass Warfare
  • 3.14159265358
  • The Great Money Flush of 2016
  • Ick
  • Grexit
  • World War $
  • The Man Who Lost His Story
  • The Valley
  • 3 1/2 Fingers
  • An Excerpt of Search
  • Bit Rot
  • Bartholomew Is Right There at the Dawn of Language
  • Temp
  • Retail
  • Trivial
  • Über That Red Dot
  • 361
  • My Name
  • Mrs. McCarthy and Mrs. Brown
  • An App Called Yoo
  • Afterword
Review by Booklist Review

Smart, prolific, and funny, Coupland (Worst. Person. Ever., 2014) has collected dozens of essays and short stories, post-2005, many of which were previously published elsewhere, into a fine anthology filled with his distinctive brand of breezy, poignant commentary. Coupland has maintained his knack for keeping his finger firmly planted on the zeitgeist, and, despite his apocalyptic worldview, he manages to retain an optimism based on human ingenuity. Humanity is capable of miraculous things, as long as we don't first destroy the planet. There is a lot of content here, possibly too much. Some entries are rather profound, but others are more ephemeral, disposable, and read like blog posts, which, unfortunately, dilutes the collection. On the upside, Coupland takes on the media-saturated world of celebrities, cults, apps, trends, Google, globalization, drones, pharmaceuticals, algorithms, metadata, and data, lots of data. His essays evoke fellow Canadian Marshall McLuhan, as well as Andy Warhol, as he addresses the ramifications of new media. The volume's title is also the name of an exhibition of Coupland's visual work, currently on display in Munich.--Segedin, Ben Copyright 2017 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Writer and artist Coupland's (Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture) collection comprises brief essays and stories of previously unpublished content, which alternate among treatments of everyday life in the postmodern era and are essentially ruminations on topics as varied as the author's childhood, politics, religion, and what it means to live in the 21st century. The fictional chapters can be at times jarring, at others playful, but overall this work succeeds in drawing the reader into tiny Couplandian worlds. What -Coupland does best is keep the reader engrossed and off balanced, so that one never really finds a comfortable spot from which to observe both the horrors and sorrows of the first decade of the 21st century. Since the timeframe of these meditative works includes 2005 to present, the content reflects the tumultuous decade for which the seasoned and prolific writer expounds. The flow from nonfiction to fictional chapters represents a fine example of a postmodern narrative. VERDICT This work will ultimately be of most interest to die-hard Coupland fans. [See Prepub Alert, 10/3/2016.]-Jim Hahn, Univ. Lib., Univ. of -Illinois, Urbana © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

An eclectic and thought-provoking collection of ephemera from Coupland (Worst. Person. Ever., 2014, etc.).The author admits in his introduction that he's wobbling unsteadily into the future with the title, a term used to describe how digital files decompose. "It also describes the way my brain has been feeling since 2000, as I shed older and weaker neurons and connections and create and enhance new and unexpected ones." This substantial collection of more than 65 stories and essays reveals the breadth and depth of Coupland's writing in a way that his recent novels have not. In addition to several acidic short stories, Coupland also contributes numerous essays on technology and the way it changes our culture, travelogues, memoirs, and satiresessentially, something for anyone who has even the slightest interest in this singular cultural voice. Short stories include works like "The Short, Brutal Life of the Channel Three News Team," about a woman whose mother guns down a news crew, and "Superman and the Kryptonite Martinis," which finds the iconic hero swilling drinks in a gin mill with Yoda. Some of the more wildly experimental pieces land flat, like a television pilot about George Washington being teleported to the future or an excerpt from Search, an arty abstract regarding what people search for online, written during an artist's residency at the technology behemoth Google. Still others are inelegant satires like "An App Called Yoo." But more often, Coupland sticks the landing, like this prescient observation from one of his technology columns: "To summarize: Everyone, basically, wants access to and control over what you will become, both as a physical and metadata entity. We are also on our way to a world of concrete walls surrounding any number of niche beliefs." A surprisingly personal meander around the mind of Generation X's elder statesman. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Before We Begin... When the pioneers crossed North America from east to west, the first thing to be thrown off the family Conestoga wagon was the piano, somewhere around Ohio. Then, somewhere near the Mississippi River, went the bookcase, and by Nebraska off went the books...and by Wyoming, everything else. The pioneers arrived in the Promised Land owning only the wagon and the clothing on their backs. They may have missed their pianos, but in the hard work of homesteading, they didn't have the time or energy to be nostalgic. There are many different sections of short works in this book, all written since 2005. Each section came about in a way that, at the time, felt random and one-off-ish-but now I look at them together and see they essentially vindicate all the furniture I've tossed from the back of my wagon, year by year, over the past decade. If you were to go on Google Maps and look down from the stratosphere at these pieces of shed weight, you could connect their dots and trace my odd voyage from the twentieth-century brain to the twenty-first. I may miss some of those pianos I threw off my wagon's rear end, but if I hadn't, then I'd be stranded somewhere back there, and that would be intolerable. IÕve titled this collection Bit Rot-a term used in digital archiving that describes the way digital files of any sort spontaneously (and quickly) decompose. It also describes the way my brain has been feeling since 2000, as I shed older and weaker neurons and connections and create and enhance new and unexpected ones. Some of the stories in this compendium come from the novel Generation A (2007), and I really scared myself when I was writing them. They flowed directly from spending two years deeply immersed in the writings of Marshall McLuhan, and they explore how language, literacy and numeracy feed the technologies we make, and then how those technologies feed back into language. In the novel these stories were integrated into the larger narrative and made a certain sense, but I think the stories work far better extracted from it. These stories capture the sense of being in a foreign country and losing your passport, credit cards and money-and the only thing you're left with is limited Internet access at a small cafZ that's only rarely open and has a low-speed connection. The local people are indifferent to you and they speak as though from Finnegans Wake, and you know that, should you ever get home, home will be a very different place than when you left it. The pieces in this book also, to me, evince a shedding of all my twentieth-century notions of what the future is and could be. By 2007 I realized that the future that was once this far-off thing on the horizon was coming closer quite quickly, and then somewhere around 2011 or 2012, the future and the present merged and became the same thing-and it's now always going to be this way, and we are now always going to be living in the future. These days I express ideas through visual means to a great extent. My books have always contained unrealized ideas for art installations and works, particularly the novels dealing with tech, such as Microserfs (1995) and JPod (2006). A much shorter version of this book was created as a ÒcatalogueÓ to coincide with a show in Rotterdam at the Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art. (This show moved on to MunichÕs Villa Stuck Museum in fall 2016.) My thanks go out to Defne Ayas of the Witte de With for her ideas and energy and hard work in taking any number of seemingly disparate ideas and weaving them together so that they reveal an overall pattern and logic-the true meaning of curation. Also my thanks go to the Witte de With's Samuel Saelemakers for his time and energy and hard work helping to realize the exhibition. And thanks to my editor, Anne Collins, for always being in the helicopter in the sky above me, connecting all of my dots that I'm too close to the ground to see. Douglas Coupland Paris, 2016 Vietnam I am Private Donald R. Garland from Bakersfield, California, as nice a place to grow up in as you can imagine-good folk, and California was booming. My mother used to put sour cherry pies out on the lower edge of the Dutch door, just the way they cool down pies in cartoons, and it was pleasant that way. Please call me Don. On August 5, 1968, I was on an unarmed film reconnaissance mission of rivers in the Bong Son region, and I was killed when my Huey Cobra's pilot got shot by a sniper from I don't know where. The rear blade snagged the remains of a napalmed tree, and the tail boom severed. It took maybe seven seconds in all. The last thing I saw was an orange explosion approaching my face like lava flying down a Hawaiian slope. I'm thinking about what I just said and how Nam it sounded. That was the thing about Nam. Everything about it was so alien that all you had to do was say a few place names with a few military flourishes and boom! It was like I was describing life on Mars, not something real that was actually happening to me, and closer to my parents' house than, say, Vienna or Sweden. For people back in Bakersfield, reading about Nam was... I don't know... like forcing them at gunpoint to read a Chinese menu closely, and no matter what you asked for, all they'd bring you was machine guns and dog soup. My death in Bong Son was expensive. Aside from the costs of raising an American child born in 1949, there were the added costs of my attending San Diego Military Academy-it probably set my old man back thirty grand-plus all the US government money it cost to start a war overseas and then pay to fly me over, peel my potatoes, wash my laundry, buy me weapons, and put me in helicopters with pilots like my pal Len Bailor, taking off in a Huey filled with canisters of film that were to have been processed and shown on CBS TV. Len always got off on that-maybe our footage would be shown right before Red Skelton or Bewitched. It cost the Vietnamese way less money to send one of their nineteen-year-olds to war. The math's not hard: grow up on a rice paddy, get a Soviet-made AK-47 (for free) and bingo, it's wartime. That's what Len called asymmetrical warfare. I often wonder if someone in Washington looked at the cost of sending over people like me and said, "You know what, this is not sound Keynesian economics. We put too much money into raising this guy in-where? Bakersfield, California?-sounds too expensive already. His mama probably put out pies to cool on a window ledge-just so he can end up dying in a fucking Huey Cobra crash? And how much does one of those things cost? How did someone that expensive end up in the shit? This is nuts. Don't we have cheaper people we can send off to that godforsaken shithole? Isn't that the reason we allowed Mississippi to be part of the country?... Where's Lyndon?" "In his office, watching TV." "He is not watching TV. He is watching TVs. All three TV networks at once. He's paranoid. He's gaga." The moment I landed in Nam I knew there was no way we'd win the war over there. Sure, we had all these Hueys and fighter jets and shit, and Ann-Margret came and performed for the USO in Danang in '66 and '68, but we had expensive people like me playing with big, expensive toys that would never stand a chance against inexpensive-basically cost-free-gook soldiers playing with lots of essentially free Commie toys. It's some sort of historical law. David and Goliath? Plus we were always getting crabs and syph, DEET burns, blister beetle scabs, and foot rot and ringworm... It was unholy. God, I was homesick in Nam. Nothing was familiar and everything stank, and man, those latrines with ventilation provided by Satan! I was grateful for the orders and discipline-otherwise I'd have cried all day. I always wanted to be on potato-peeling duty, except I went to a military academy, so they'd never have me doing that kind of chore. I'd have liked to be peeling potatoes because at least a potato's a potato and you know what it is and that it comes from the northern hemisphere. Potatoes don't have shuddering diesel engines that stink in your face, making sleep impossible, and potatoes aren't yokels with teeth that look like handfuls of dice randomly stuck into gums inside heads with the intelligence quotient of Popeye cartoons... but I'm just being mean. We were all just babies over there. We shouldn't have been there. It was stupid. We all knew it. April 1968: 48,000 men drafted and 537,000 troops in Nam. Those pansies burning their draft cards in New York City were totally right to do so, even if they did suck dick. I don't think I met even one person in Nam who thought we were going to win someday. We all knew we were fucked. Maybe Ann-Margret thought we'd win. We just didn't want to get killed...but then, obviously, I got killed, so...just more proof us boys were right. I'd like to talk to Mr. Washington General Guy someday... but time no longer exists for me, so what's a day? I'd ask, "Sir, why did you think it was a good idea?" "Who said any of this was a good idea? How old are you, boy? Let me see-Private Garland?" "Call me Don. I was a month shy of nineteen when I was killed." "Boo hoo, Don." "Sir?" "Nam was obviously a total fucking disaster. There, are you satisfied?" "But wait-how long did you know it was a total fucking disaster, sir?" "Christ. Right out of the gate. If you want, I can go through my Day-Timer and find the magic moment when it dawned on me that it was all a colossal goatfuck." "Actually, yes, sir. Could you, please?" "Here it is: a telex from March 7, 1966. Mr. Bob Hope demands that he and Miss Margret be provided with Sealy Posturepedic mattresses with custom-molded foam pillows for her impending visit." "And?" "That's all. I read that specific telex, Don, and something inside me died. I don't think Ann-Margret even knew the Nam reality. The reality was that Bob Hope had been in Nam before and he knew what a cosmic shithole that place really was, and he buckled at the thought of Ann-Margret witnessing the whole truth, because if she knew, then that would show in her performances. And then the troops would get spooked, and it would have just put the doom on fast-forward." "But me... and all the other guys like me who got killed." "You were cannon fodder. What else do you want me to say?" "Excuse me?" "Don't play dumb. You and all the other guys-and women too, for that matter, goddamn dykes mostly-just cannon fodder. This somehow surprises you, Mr. Military Academy Graduate?" "Tell me more." "This is getting tiring. The thing about males from about seventeen to twenty-two is that nature rigs your brains-don't ask me how-so that you're susceptible to even the stupidest fucking ideas, whatever they may be. And you're out there carrying a rifle or a scimitar or-fuck, I don't know... If it's not the war, maybe it's just a bitter, fucked-up English teacher who wants to poison you by making you hate all the writers he or she hates-I used to study English, and I remember those teachers. They didn't care about what was good or bad-they just wanted to poison young brains. And that was just English classes. It wasn't even something as visceral as putting dumbfuck rich boys from Bakersfield, California, out in some godforsaken toe-rot shithole like Bong Son to die useless, overfunded deaths." "I see." "Don, when was the last time you saw a guy in his thirties ditch his family and run off to certain death in some goatfuck war? Never. It's a brain thing. Males from seventeen to twenty-two are genetically fucked. They'll do anything for anybody and they'll think it's the right thing. They have no sense of risk assessment." "That's kind of cynical." "Brother, young dumbos like you have been going off to war to fight for crazy batshit stuff since the dawn of man. Makes me embarrassed to be human sometimes." "Thank you for your candor, sir." "You're welcome, Don." You maybe think I must be angry for having been sent off so cynically to die in a pointless war with no clear good guys or bad guys, where young men were turned into zombies and ghouls and where everything good in the world was covered with a mixture of gasoline and Styrofoam pellets and then set alight. But what you don't know is that I went to a museum once, in Toronto, Canada, in-1965?-and it was summer and my parents were arguing and my brothers were being a real pain, and I simply walked away from them, walked up echoey travertine stairs to another floor, into the rooms where they kept the displays of taxidermied life on Earth, and it changed the way I thought. Walking through those chambers didn't feel like a boring school field trip: it was the most wondrous trip ever. I looked inside the glass display cases and they had an Alaska king crab with red prickly legs longer than my daddy's arms, and there was a skeleton of a triceratops, and there was an extinct passenger pigeon, and a fungus that secreted a red blob shaped like a soccer ball. And there were foxes and butterflies and deep-sea creatures with little dangling light things in front of their mouths, and there was a clamshell the size of my car's trunk and... I just looked at all of this life. So much life. Life in every shape and form and size, and I just stood there and thought, Here it is. I'm alive, just as everything here in these cases was once alive. So what is it, then, this thing called life? This thing called life that I share with all these creatures here. Excerpted from Bit Rot by Douglas Coupland All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.