Two recent reads, NWR

Two recent reads that I’d recommend.

Douglas Coupland’s JPod (see website http://www.jpod.info/ or the book on amazon) is a very funny, astute sort of book. It’s a creative, humorous satirical and deeply ironic look at the current hi-tech generation, and it is nearly perfectly judged. I read it in the space of a couple of plane journeys and the assorted delays associated with them. Coupland is accessible and light without being too ephemeral. It’s the first instance I’ve read him – I think I’ll have to take a look at his back catalogue, despite seeing him referred to, perhaps not unfairly, as specializing in ‘hyper-ironised glibness’. Of special merit are a number of stream of consciousness-like blocks of text interspersed in the narrative. They’re brilliantly done.

The second book is a bit of a door wedge, but I’m really enjoying it. Andrew Marr’s History of contemporary Britain is something of a rarity: an interesting, absorbing history book. I guess Marr’s skill lies in what he leaves out as much as what he includes. The tone is quite lively, seasoned gently with dry wit, and the text paints a vivid picture of the way Britain was in the 40s,

50s, 60s and 70s (I’m only now onto the 80s, and I’m looking forward to see how he deals with the nineties and noughties). The book additionally comes across as tremendously balanced. We all have biases when we re-tell stories. There’s what ‘actually happened’, but the very act of observing what happened, even first hand, is a personal thing. The ‘truth’ passes through a set of filters. With a history like that, focusing heavily on the political landscape, the potential for skewing and bias is huge. Some folks say that for that reason, all history is biased and any attempt to get to the ‘truth’ is doomed to failure. But I feel that we have a duty to try to get as close to we can, and be as free from bias as possible. And Marr’s detail does seem to do that pretty well. His interpretation of events seems a really intelligent, insightful and balanced one, and it’s filling in lots of the gaps in my knowledge of postwar Britain. It’s additionally forcing me to rethink some of my own views on that history, which in truth were probably not based on all that much info at all.

Original post by Jamie

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