Girlfriend in a Coma (book)
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Girlfriend in a Coma, a novel by Douglas Coupland, was released in 1998. It tells the story of a group of friends growing up in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada in the late 1970s. On the night of a teenage house-wrecking party, one of the protagonists, Karen, falls into a coma. More alarmingly, she seemed to expect it, having given her boyfriend, Richard, a letter detailing the vivid dreams of the future she had experienced and how she wanted to sleep for a thousand years to avoid that dystopia.
The book was named after the 1987 single by The Smiths of the same name.
The first part of the book covers the next 17 years in the lives of the friends. Richard has to cope with losing Karen but gaining a daughter (Megan), as fatherhood is thrust upon him: the outcome of their mutual loss of virginity just hours before Karen fell into her coma. Wendy throws herself into work and Linus loses himself, looking for that which is lost. Pamela becomes a supermodel and Hamilton, a demolition expert, but none of the friends lives turn out how they imagined. Broken and lacking, they return to the suburbs of their youth to try to pull themselves together until one day, almost two decades after she fell asleep, Karen regains consciousness.
The middle section of the book deals with Karen's return to the world. It also begins, as Karen remembers, to explain where she had been all those years and the reality she had hoped to escape. Then, suddenly, the future is upon her, upon them all, and the world ends.
The final part of the book details life after this end: after everyone, bar these seven people, has fallen asleep and not woken up again.
It is considered one of Coupland's finest novels, with a stronger narrative than some of his earlier book but still providing relevant cultural criticism and commentary. In the UK, the Guardian newspaper described this book as Coupland "becoming extraordinary" (25 April 1998) and The Times as "a disturbing, thought- provoking and moving novel. Girlfriend in a Coma has something of the quality of a fairytale, but it contains a sharp realism that makes the book scarily contemporary" (15 May 1999).
ISBN numbers
- ISBN 0060987324 (paperback, 1999)
- ISBN 0006385427 (paperback, 2000)