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How Happy To Be

Average rating: 4/5

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How Happy To Be

by Katrina Onstad

McClelland & Stewart | June 5, 2007 | Trade Paperback

How Happy to Be captures the life of a disillusioned entertainment journalist as she heads into a downward spiral of ritual substance abuse and empty punditry. Along this path of self-destruction, her past on a West Coast commune, both comic and poignant, keeps intruding. It isn't until her indiscretions catch up with her that she realizes she must face that past if she is to have any chance of finding where her happiness lies.

Onstad's ability to blend satire with a moving story of coming to terms with life's deepest wounds makes
How Happy to Be a wholly satisfying and striking novel.

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Reviews

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 5/5

    I couldn't put this down!

    CD

    3 months ago

    i read this book in one go while on vacation. I would highly recommend it for the twenty something crowd! Katrina is witty and sarcastic. I loved it!

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    This is a well written novel that is a realistic version of the chick lit novel. It would definitely appeal to women over the age of 20 but under 40. It's almost a coming of age novel type of novel where the main character figures out what happiness is to her while battling her way through our materialistic "results oriented" society. One warning: this novel is very raw in its style and at times is severely depressing; however, it's quite a good reflection of our society and its values.

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    Rating: 4/5

    Don't be fooled, not Chick Lit.

    Peter

    • Indigo Employee

    6 years ago

    This novel pleasantly surprised me. Ms. Onstad has written a stylish and hip little love story that also skewers big city journalism and the Toronto International Film Festival. The characters are very human and I found myself liking each of them. I can’t wait to see more from this up and coming new talent.

    • Was this review
      helpful to you?

    I just got my copy today and I highly recommend this book. Some very
    funny parts and the inside look at the entertainment world is interesting.
    But the book is more than that. Some of what she writes about
    relationships is really great and thought provoking. Too late for
    Christmas but it would make a great present for any smart women you
    know.

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Details

From the Publisher

How Happy to Be captures the life of a disillusioned entertainment journalist as she heads into a downward spiral of ritual substance abuse and empty punditry. Along this path of self-destruction, her past on a West Coast commune, both comic and poignant, keeps intruding. It isn't until her indiscretions catch up with her that she realizes she must face that past if she is to have any chance of finding where her happiness lies.

Onstad's ability to blend satire with a moving story of coming to terms with life's deepest wounds makes
How Happy to Be a wholly satisfying and striking novel.

About the Author

Katrina Onstad is a film and culture writer for CBC Arts Online and has had her work published in the Guardian, salon.com, and the New York Times. She is also a columnist for Chatelaine and was formerly chief film critic at the National Post.

Katrina Onstad lives in Toronto.

Bookclub Guide

1. How Happy to Be begins in the melancholy childhood aftermath of Maxime's mother's death but quickly switches to Maxime's present-day world of hangovers and men she calls "Ad Sales" and "Knee-Socks Steve," revealing how the character masks her unease and fear of intimacy as an adult. How does the tone differ between the two eras throughout the story, and how did the author transition between these two Maximes?

2. On the surface, Maxime is a caustic, drug- and drink-dependent entertainment reporter, while the man from the past who reappears, Theo McArdle, is an outdoorsy, amiable physicist researching "what makes up the universe." (p.41) Their past attraction seems to rekindle itself. Maxime is impressed by Theo's work and by his teaching stint in Africa, but what impresses Theo about Maxime? Is his attraction to her based solely on the young woman he once knew at university? How can we read past Maxime's version of herself to see what Theo sees?

3. What are the layers of meaning in the title How Happy to Be, and what does Maxime reveal to us when she says that she and her ex-boyfriend John "could never decide how happy to be"? (p.190) How do you interpret Maxime's reaction to the L.A. screenwriter's philosophy of unhappiness - that "all of us are shying away from intimacy … using clever cynical devices"? (p.233)

4. How does Katrina Onstad manage to create an aura of vulnerability around the celebrities Maxime interviews, despite her character's seeming contempt or even pity for the rich and famous? How do you interpret Maxime's growing disillusion with the movies she reviews and the celebrities who star in them? In what ways does Maxime approach her own life as if it were a movie?

5. The novel is set in both Toronto and a fictional island off Vancouver's coast, but does the story seem Canadian to you, for reasons other than geography? How does place play a role in the story, and what do you make of the author's depiction of Toronto, and the city's impact on Maxime? Why does Maxime say, towards the end of the book, that she misses the city?

6. Katrina Onstad was herself a film critic at a newspaper and in this novel has both satirized her experiences during a particular era of journalistic trends and extrapolated from archetypes to create new fictional characters and situations. Writer and artist Douglas Coupland describes the novel as "the magic place between fact and fiction." What is the responsibility of a writer in finding that place?

7. Maxime remembers that when her mother was dying, her father began "rebuilding her with his stories," and that this made him seem "like a liar" (p.142) in her child's perspective. However, throughout the novel, Maxime brings our attention to several embellishments of her own. How does the author shape this seeming contradiction? Why do you think Maxime continues to tell untruths about her past, even to Franny as the two of them talk about their dead parents? How is this an extension of how her father talked about her mother or how adults piece together the parent they knew only as a child? What does this reveal about how we all construct memory?

8. One of the most heartbreaking passages in the novel involves the Guatemalan woman Mercy and her daughter Maria, who are strangers to Maxime. How is this story - so brief and yet so full - integral to the novel, and why do you think Maxime questions its veracity when Mercy leaves the streetcar? Can you find other passages in which Maxime cuts short a poignant moment? What do you think the author is showing us about Maxime's emotional state? How does trust feature in Maxime's life?

9. Maxime tells us, "My mother … moved waterbug fast, but my father dove down deep into himself." (p.271) How is Maxime like each of her parents, and is she aware of the similarities?

10. Maxime is impressed by Franny's capacity for forgiveness and realizes Theo and Elaine share this same elusive quality. Are there other characters you could group by strength or weakness?

11. What is it that gives Maxime a special connection to Franny, long before she meets her? What is the significance of Maxime's father ending up with Dolores, Franny's mother?

12. During her unhappy adolescence, Maxime steals away from school to a movie theatre, and is eventually found by her frantic father. Later in the book, the author pens a near-mirror scene, but how does Maxime's "escape" and the rescue by her father differ from the earlier scene? Beyond its physical risks, how is this last journey both dangerous and necessary for Maxime?

13. How is the notion of home explored throughout the story? Think of Maxime's childhood homes, her apartment in Toronto, Sunera's mother's house, etc. Remember, too, that Maxime's father builds various dwelling-like structures throughout the book. How does the playhouse for Franny take on special significance, twice, as a container for a family?

14. What do you think finally allows Maxime to come to terms with her past? Discuss the scene in which Max and her father take her mother's ashes to the water. (p.276-279) What surprises her about her father's behaviour? Similarly, what surprises her about her own behaviour when Theo arrives at Elaine's? Who do you think Maxime is addressing on the last page of the novel?

Trade Paperback

304 Pages, 5.52 x 8.49 x 0.83 in

June 5, 2007

McClelland & Stewart

English


0771068999
9780771068997

From Community

Who's Listing as Top Ten

From the Critics

"Katrina Onstad finds that magic place between fact and fiction and charms the reader with her discovery. A wonderful book."
- Douglas Coupland

"Pop culture geeks will go nuts for Onstad's brutal dissection of the life of a media whore. . . . A triumph."
- NOW magazine

"A deft meditation on nostalgia, grieving, and familial relations. . . . Fresh, compelling and flawless."
- Toronto Star

"[An] ambitious and impressive first novel . . . intelligent and arresting. An auspicious literary debut."
- National Post

"An acerbic, hilarious and culturally astute page-turner of a debut."
- Flare

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