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City of Glass: Douglas Coupland's Vancouver

Average rating: 4/5

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City of Glass: Douglas Coupland's Vancouver

by Douglas Coupland

Douglas & McIntyre | September 21, 2000 | Trade Paperback

A witty survey by the noted chronicler of alternative culture
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$23.70

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Reviews

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    Imagine following Highway 99 south from Whistler down through West and North Vancouver, across the Second Narrows Bridge, along Boundary Road, crossing into Richmond, picking up the 99 again, and driving straight through to Seattle. Now, pay attention only to what you can see (Mount Baker, for instance), or things that are to your right -- west of the Vancouver-Burnaby border. Observe and comment on those things lucidly and with humour. But ignore the vast suburbs stretching to the east. Spend more time on Bellingham than on New Westminster.You have an idea of this book. Like Coupland's other works, it demonstrates keen insight about a limited part of its subject -- this case, Vancouver. He is a North Shore boy, and it shows. Worth reading, but definitely only one person's view.

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    Kerry Brinkert

    Rating: 5/5

    Coupland does it again!

    Kerry Brinkert

    11 years ago

    With City of Glass, Coupland has done it again -- articulating the experience of so many people his / our age in a way that is so accurate and clear! This is yet another excellent work by Coupland. His words ring so true -- especially for those of us from or living in the Vancouver area. I would recommend it to anyone, though, as the messages underlying his insider's guide to the city have somewhat greater applicability.

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    Cliff Stefanuk

    Rating: 5/5

    My town in a nut shell

    Cliff Stefanuk

    11 years ago

    In a world that grows smaller by the day, I see a larger number of my geographically disposed friends passing through my door. I am always glad to be a tour guide in what I like to consider, although I am from Saskatoon, my town. The mountains are mine, the beaches are mine and I love to point out the litte quirks that make Vancouver unique.

    Douglas Coupland takes readers on a light hearted tour of my town and has done a superlative job. From relating a tourist large attration down to a more personal level, to exposing small sub-cultures that exisit in Vancouver, Coupland has done an excellent job in showing the true side of my town.

    I recomend this book to locals and tourists alike, and hope that you get a chance to read it some day.

    Thank you.

Details

From Our Editors

Douglas Coupland describes the spirit of his hometown, Vancouver, in this fascinating, stylish collection of words and images. Vancouver is a beautiful city famous for snowboarding, Greenpeace, cyberpunk, Generation X, The X Files and Culture Jamming. Now discover what it's like from the inside. Clever, eclectic, insightful and provocative, City of Glass reveals the real Vancouver: a social laboratory for new ways of thinking and living, blending extreme politics and sports, European, Asian and indigenous cultures. The 70 colour images include breathtaking shots of the city from eminent photographers, as well as ephemera such as unique Campbell's soup cans with Cantonese/English/French labels.

From the Publisher

A witty survey by the noted chronicler of alternative culture

From the Jacket

"There's nothing about Vancouver on the book shelves that offers any visual sense of our city's being a laboratory for new ways of thinking and living. Which it is. Especially after World War II -- design and art and architecture from then and ongoing." -- Douglas Coupland

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.
Douglas Coupland was born on a Canadian NATO base in Baden-Sollingen, Germany, and raised in West Vancouver, where he still resides, in a house designed by Ron Thon. Among his best-sellers are Generation X, Polaroids from the Dead, Microserfs and, most recently, Miss Wyoming -- altogether in print in some 30 countries. Less well known is the fact that he is a graduate of the Emily Carr School of Art and Design in Vancouver and that his on-going design experiments include everything from launching a line of furniture to Smirnoff vodka ads for the New Yorker (a fundraiser for the Western Canada Wilderness Committee). His journalism ranges form a short story on Dolly the cloned sheep in Time magazine (U.S. edition) to guest-editing two special issues of Vancouver Magazine on Vancouver's quirky future as a city state on the Pacific.

About the Author

Douglas Coupland was born December 30, 1961 on a Canadian military base in Baden-Soellingen, Germany. He attended Emily Carr College of Art and Design in Vancouver in 1984 and he completed a two-year course in Japanese business science in Hawaii in 1986. His career has consisted of writing, sculpting, and editing and he also hosted The Search for Generation X, a PBS documentary, 1991. His work includes Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture, Shampoo Planet, Life after God, and Polaroids from the Dead. He has also contributed articles to periodicals, including The New Republic, The New York Times, Wired, and Saturday Night.

Edition Details

with flaps

Trade Paperback

144 Pages, 6.61 x 7.99 x 0.48 IN

September 21, 2000

Douglas & McIntyre

English

Canadian Author


1550548182
9781550548181

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