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Entertainment News: Sunday, January 16, 2000
Coupland's clever 'Miss Wyoming' follows path of two
pop-culture casualties
By Mark Lindquist
Special to The Seattle Times
Douglas Coupland's first novel, "Generation X: Tales of an
Accelerated Culture," was published in 1991. "Miss Wyoming" is his
eighth book in nine years. Coupland also works as a designer and
sculptor in Vancouver, B.C.
How can anyone write so many books in one decade? Well, for
starters, don't spend too much time crafting the prose or narrative.
This works for Coupland because no one reads him for artistry. We
read him for his pop-culture sensibility, for his oddly mannered
language, for his asides, for those jolts of recognition.
The phrase "Generation X" was stolen from Billy Idol - it was the
name of Idol's first band, and Coupland has been ripping off and
riffing on pop culture ever since. His second novel, `Shampoo
Planet," shifted to the modern tedium of "Global Teens," Coupland's
name for the generation that followed Xers.
Then came "Life After God," a collection of stories with diverse
characters whose common bond was a flat ache for something to
believe in. Lighter fare followed. "Microserfs," a novel about
computer geeks at Microsoft, was fun and squishy like an OK sitcom.
"Polaroids from the Dead," a collection of essays chasing the
Zeitgeist, veered erratically between the sentimental and the
incisive.
"Girlfriend in a Coma," a high-concept novel, revisited
everything Coupland had riffed on before, but from the wide-eyed
perspective of a girl who wakes up from a 17-year coma. The title
was stolen from a Smiths' song, and if you don't know who the Smiths
are, you're not part of Coupland's demographic target. "Lara's Book"
was a tangent, a coffee-table thing, a weird mix of meditative
essays and how-to strategies for techies who are into the computer
game "Tomb Raider," which features cyber creation Lara Croft.
Now, here's "Miss Wyoming," a zigzagging story about two
pop-culture casualties who stumble onto each other: John Johnson, a
burned-out 37-year-old movie producer, and Susan Colgate, a former
teen beauty queen turned sitcom actress. Walking clichés, but they
are drawn with surprising strokes of authenticity.
We are introduced to Johnson via this internal dialogue, "Hey,
John Johnson, you've pretty much felt all the emotions you're ever
likely to feel, and from here on it's reruns." But John has never
been in love, and this is the "one simple hole in his life." He is
in the hospital having a near-death experience when he sees Susan on
TV and falls for her - "TV had taught him that love was pretty much
a cure for all ills."
Susan is the more complex character. She's the damaged product of
the child-beauty-pageant circuit. Her nutty stage mother moves the
family to Wyoming, because how tough can the competition be in
Wyoming? Susan becomes Miss Wyoming, but eventually rebels and drops
out of the teen queen game, only to land in the frying pan of a
sitcom. Her acting career dies in "the grunge era." She survives a
near-death experience of her own, a plane crash, and meets John.
John may need Susan, but Susan needs to resolve some Jerry
Springer-sized issues with her mother. A story line of sorts charts
this out, and an interesting cast of extras develops along the way,
but the narrative flashes backward and forward and sideways, which
stalls the momentum.
The tricky thing about reading Coupland is navigating the
opposing waves of irony, cynicism and sentimentality. He can wryly
remark on the deceits of modern entertainment, then write this:
"Susan could be more to him than his latest box-office ranking. With
Susan he might actually raise something better out of himself than a
hot pitch for a pointless film. Something moral and fine inside each
of them might sprout and grow." Not only does John appear to believe
this mush, I get the sense that Coupland wants to believe it.
The pleasure in "Miss Wyoming" comes in lines like, "he turned
into the killer bunny from Monty Python," in the way the buzz of our
time is rendered, and in the author's conflicted tone. Coupland is
too smart and knowing to be gushy, yet he can be just that, and it's
because he wants to be not so knowing, so ironic, so 1990s. The
overall impression Coupland's catalog leaves me with is this: This
is a bright guy who badly wants to believe in something but doesn't
yet. He is daring enough to venture into the existential territory
of Richard Ford's "The Sportswriter" and Walker Percy's "The
Moviegoer," and if he pales somewhat in comparison, what younger
writer doesn't?
Lest this review seem jaded in a very 1990s way, I should point
out that I enjoyed "Miss Wyoming" immensely - it's clever, distinct
and it occasionally moved me. return to mark lindquist home
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