Review | Worst. Person. Ever. Douglas Coupland

17671882Meet Raymond Gunt, the “Worst. Person. Ever.” He’s self-centred, obnoxious and obsessed with sex. Worse of all, though, he’s also utterly pathetic, dropping in and out of utterly absurd misadventures that are supposed to be entertaining, but instead form a rather sad sack of a book.

Douglas Coupland’s Worst. Person. Ever. has a premise ripe for satire. Cameraman and self-important failure Raymond Gunt is hired by his ex-wife to film a Survivor-like show in a remote tropical island. Raymond, being a despicable person, decides to hire as his assistant a homeless man named Neal who he thinks is even more disgusting than he is. Unfortunately for Raymond, he being also a totally unlucky person (karma’s a bitch), Neal turns out to be a total stud muffin who appears to live a charmed existence and acts as a gleeful foil to highlight Raymond’s haplessness.

Things go wrong in a variety of ways – Raymond’s cruel jests drive an obese man to a fatal heart attack, Raymond himself nearly dies of anaphylactic poisoning twice (the second of which was deliberately induced to get himself out of jail), Raymond is arrested again (he has a knack for pissing people off) and has to dance the Angry Dance from Billy Elliott to win his freedom, he soils his pants while dropping a nuclear bomb on an island of trash, and so on and so forth. With the exception of the poor obese man, the other incidents are more entertaining in the retelling than in the actual reading. I was at page 152 when I realized I didn’t want to waste any more of my time on this. I skipped to the end to see if there was something worth reading on for, and despite a certain knee-jerk-ha-ha-in-your-face-raymond-gunt revelation, it just felt more of the same. It may well turn out that I missed a stroke of genius in the pages in between, but after 152 pages, I really couldn’t care less.

I don’t generally mind despicable characters. I even enjoy a gleeful sendup of pop culture’s shiny veneer. I love Peter Griffin and Family Guy. South Park makes me laugh, even though I admit a gentler humour is more my taste. But here’s the thing: Worst. Person. Ever. isn’t even entertaining. It felt dated, for one thing, Survivor long past being a cultural icon and the Billy Elliott jokes going stale by the third or fourth reference. I may have smiled at the Flintstones in Vegas reference, but by the time Coupland brought Mr. Bean in for laughs, I was bored. Worst of all, I think, is the self-conscious smugness that accompanied every joke. Aren’t I clever? the story seems to ask. Aren’t I showing Raymond Gunt as just the absolute worst? It’s a story that tries far too hard, and it’s tiresome to slog through. Yes, Raymond will screw this up; yes, Neal will come out a shining beacon; yes, bravo, here are a couple new clever little cultural references that reveal something profound about society; yes, yes, yes, ad infinitum.

If you want to read a book about a despicable character, I highly recommend Martin Amis’ Lionel Asbo instead. Biting, brilliant satire, and a thoroughly entertaining read.

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Thank you to Random House of Canada for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Review | Kicking the Sky, Anthony De Sa

15792510Anthony De Sa’s Kicking the Sky is a coming of age narrative in Toronto’s Portuguese community in the 1970s. It involves the murder of shoeshine boy Emanuel Jaques and a group of young boys who try to make sense of their neighbourhood after such a horrific event.

Antonio Rebelo, first introduced in De Sa’s earlier novel Barnacle Love, and his friends Manny and Ricky love exploring their neighbourhood and are fascinated by an enigmatic new neighbour. The Jaques murder however raises many parental fears and anti-gay sentiments, and the boys’ lives are irrevocably changed.

There is an abundance of fascinating detail in this story. The slaughtering of a pig, for example, is described in such gory detail that it’s almost enough to turn anyone vegetarian, but it’s also contextualized as a rite of passage within the community – a boy’s ability to participate in the slaughter is seen as a sign of manhood. Scenes of the boys running through a maze of alleyways and leaping over rooftops are rushed off with exhilaration, and we can just feel their thrill at freedom.

I found the subplot about the religious fervour surrounding a piece of food somewhat amusing, yet disturbingly all too imaginable. Antonio’s mortification at being used as an object of worship, coupled with the desperation of the people who are willing to pay for the merest touch of his alleged healing power is a horrific depiction of how people like Antonio’s father are willing to take advantage of other people’s need to believe in something. Even more striking, the local priest’s response to the scam heavily implicates the Church in this institutionalized deception.

De Sa paints a comprehensive portrait of Toronto in the 1970s, and includes glimpses into the seedier aspects of neighbourhood life. Young boys trading sex for money are commonplace in De Sa’s Toronto, and Antonio’s protection from that world appears more a privilege than, as should be, a right. A young girl’s pregnancy leads to her eviction from home and her rescue by a young man maintains a distinctly creepy current throughout.

Nothing is what it seems in De Sa’s Toronto, and the Jaques murder brings everything to a head and forces Antonio and his friends into adulthood.

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Thank you to Random House of Canada for a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Review | Game, Barry Lyga

0316125873I absolutely loved the concept behind Barry Lyga’s I Hunt Killers. A teenage son of the world’s most notorious serial killer decides to use his father’s training to hunt serial killers himself, and therefore prove he isn’t like his father. Jasper Dent has the daddy of daddy issues, and it makes for a gripping, emotional read, and a hero/potential anti-hero you can really get behind. There are shades of Dexter Morgan’s in Jazz’s own quest, and kudos to Lyga for fearlessly exploring the darkness within his teenage protagonist.

Game ups the ante by pitting father against son in even more overt ways. Jazz is somewhat more confident in his role as serial killer hunter, but his subconscious keeps torturing him with disturbing memories, and he is still unable to shake off the fear that he is predisposed to ultimately become like his father.

On one hand, Game is a bit of a letdown after the absolutely compelling first volume in the series. It reads more like a traditional thriller, except with a teenage protagonist rather than a hardened professional. Jazz’s character development had always fascinated me more than the mysteries themselves, so oddly enough, I found myself somewhat disappointed by the heightened focus on the mystery in this book.

Connie plays a much larger role in this book, and while I like how important she is in keeping Jazz deeply grounded in his own humanity, while I like that Lyga has a female character who can hold her own as well as the male protagonist can, I thought her part in the story mostly unnecessary and would personally have preferred to instead have had Jazz’s solitude offer us a deeper exploration of his psyche.

That being said, there’s still plenty of dark and twisty Jasper Dent psychology to grip readers. Jazz’s hesitation to have sex with Connie, because he’s afraid it’ll awaken some latent psychosis is reminiscent of Angel’s inability to have sex with Buffy at the risk of losing his soul, and it’s particularly striking within the context of the deeply disturbing, highly sexualized, memories surfacing in Jazz’s subconscious.

As well, as an action packed thriller, it’s a hell of a ride. Particularly in the second half of the book, where my Goodreads profile shows comments such as “Holy crap!” at around the 75% mark, and “OMG what a cliff hanger!” at the very end.

The Jasper Dent books is an audacious, utterly fascinating series, and I can’t wait to see where Lyga takes it next.

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Thank you to Hachette Book Group Canada for an advance reading copy in exchange for an honest review.