Book description
Following the hugely acclaimed bestseller Hey Nostradamus! comes a
major novel from Douglas Coupland: the wonderfully warm, funny,
life-affirming story of Liz Dunn, a woman who has spent her whole life
alone and lonely - until now… This is a brilliant work of commercial
literary fiction from an author who just gets better and better.
'My name is Liz Dunn. The Liz Dunns of this world take classes in
croissant baking, and would rather chew on soccer balls than deny their
children muesli. They own one sex toy, plus one cowboy fantasy that
accompanies its use… Look at me: I am a traitor to my name: I'm not
cheerful; I'm drab. I'm crabby and friendless. And lonely.'
Liz Dunn is 42 years old, and lonely. Her house is like 'a spinster's
cell block', and she may or may not snore - there's never been anybody
to tell her. Then one day in 1997, with the comet Hale Bopp burning
bright in the blue-black sky, Liz receives an urgent phone call asking
her to visit a young man in hospital. All at once, the loneliness that
has come to define her is ripped away by this funny, smart, handsome
young stranger, Jeremy. Her son.
Eleanor Rigby is a tale of loneliness and hope that introduces Douglas
Coupland's finest character yet. Illuminated by a wonderfully gentle,
searching wisdom, it sees Coupland ascend to a new level of peace and
grace in his ever-more-extraordinary career. 'A high spirited moving
study of loneliness and all its opposites.' Observer Books of the Year.
'A powerful and moving examination of a life lived negotiating
loneliness.' Independent
'Eleanor Rigby is one of Coupland's subtlest indictments yet of
Yankee-yuppie culture.' Daily Telegraph
'Bristles with acerbic observations of modern life.' Sunday Telegraph
'Funny, unexpected and fragile, here [Coupland is] the chronicler of
our potentials rather than our losses.' Guardian DOUGLAS COUPLAND
first came to prominence as the author of Generation X (1995). He
followed that with a sequence of ever-more daring and inventive novels,
including Life After God, Girlfriend in a Coma and Hey Nostradamus! He
lives in Vancouver.