34 - Binge.mp3
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alina zeranska the art of polish cooking -
amy recob -
andrea caceres -
bj nowak -
bj nowak one more thing -
bloodlines by nelson demille -
brick puffinton -
bugabees friends with allergies -
catherine hapka -
chadwick moore -
daddy and me -
DK Visual -
dora's counting christmas -
extinction by douglas preston -
facing cancer -
heather au -
how to eat chocolate sarah ford -
i went walking -
I'll never let you go -
jan pienkowski -
john grisham the exchange -
karen katz -
kelley armstrong -
kelley armstrong hemlock island -
little monsters jan pienkowski -
marianne richmond -
megan e bryant -
miles hyman shirley jackson -
my dog just speaks spanish andrea caceres -
national audubon society -
not forever but for now by chuck palahniuk -
oso polar oso polar -
precious moments praying -
robert b parkers broken trust -
samuel j butcher -
sarah e heller -
shirley jackson's the lottery -
Sofia the First -
stephen king you like it darker -
strawberry shortcake berry blossom festival -
sue williams -
taco tuesday -
theodore stern mikkael sekeres -
todd grimson -
todd grimson brand new cherry flavor -
Troilus and Cressida -
tucker -
william shakespeare -
Yangsze Choo -
Yangsze Choo The Fox Wife
by Douglas Coupland
The first new work of fiction since 2013 from one of Canada's most successful, idiosyncratic and world-defining writers, Douglas Coupland. He's called it Binge because it's impossible to read just one.
Imagine feeling 100% alive every moment of every minute of the day! Maybe that's how animals live. Or trees, even. I sometimes stare at the plastic bag tree visible from my apartment window and marvel that both it and I are equally alive and that there's no sliding scale of life. You're either alive, or you're not. Or you're dead or you're not.
Thirty years after Douglas Coupland broke the fiction mould and defined a generation with Generation X, he is back with Binge, 60 stories laced with his observational profundity about the way we live and his existential worry about how we should be living: the very things that have made him such an influential and bestselling writer. Not to mention that he can also be really funny.
Here the narrators vary from story to story as Doug catches what he calls "the voice of the people," inspired by the way we write about ourselves and our experiences in online forums. The characters, of course, are Doug's own: crackpots, cranks and sweetie-pies, dad dancers and perpetrators of carbecues. People in the grip of unconscionable urges; lonely people; dying people; silly people. If you love Doug's fiction, this collection is like rain on the desert.