I've been a fan of Coupland's since "Girlfriend in a Coma" was published, and since then have read all of his work. Personally I've loved almost all of it since "Girlfriend...", although "JPod" and "The Gum Thief" were slight lapses, albeit still enjoyable, but his earlier output hasn't appealed to me quite as much. "Generation X", although lauded by many as his best book, has never really grabbed me on any of the three occasions I've read it, hoping to find that certain something I'd somehow missed.
"Generation A" is not a sequel to "Generation X", and it grips from the start. Imagine a future where bees are extinct, but somehow five people around the world (USA, Canada, France, Sri Lanka and New Zealand) are all suddenly stung. Helicopters or military transport planes land, figures in hazmat suits step out, and the five individuals are taken away, drugged and bound if they struggle. When they come to they find themselves in research facilities, furnishings stripped of all brand identities, and each day they have blood samples taken, a computer generated voice talking to them in an accent of their choice, asking them questions about themselves. They are eventually released, but are soon recalled to an island off the coast of Canada and instructed to tell each other stories...
I found the first half of the book utterly gripping, wondering who the people were, how and why they'd been stung by a seemingly extinct species, and why they had been rounded up. I was a little concerned at the start of the second half as I thought the individual stories (not reminiscences, but short pieces of fiction) would drag and become repetitive, but this was far from the truth - they were all hugely enjoyable and incredibly created. What was the purpose of this though? Ahhh - it all comes together beautifully in the end, and any hints in this review would ruin the surprises.
Yes, it's true to say that most of the narrators "sound" the same as each other, but don't all of Coupland's characters all ultimately sound a little like Coupland? The reviewer who complained about the mentions of "Finnegans Wake" clearly didn't understand why this was mentioned (it is explained in the book), and as for the occasional bit of weird grammar, well, the book is supposed to be the sound of people talking, inventing stories on the spur of the moment, and not all of us speak perfectly all of the time.
"Eleanor Rigby" used to be my favourite Coupland novel, but I think this has trumped it. I loved it.