Miss Wyoming

Miss Wyoming

by Douglas Coupland (Author)

Synopsis

The brilliant new novel from the bestselling cult author of them all. Susan and John need to disappear -- Susan and John need to find each other. Meet Susan Colgate -- Miss Wyoming. Winner of a hundred teen pageants, child star of Meet the Blooms (America's favourite family), owner of a hideously pushy mother...and now reduced to small, brainless parts in small, brainless movies. Oh, and sole survivor of Flight 802. If she were to walk away from the wreckage now, before the emergency crews get here, she could disappear and nobody would ever know...Meet John Johnson -- action film star (Bel Air P.I...um, Bel Air P.I. 2), occasional sado-masochist, junkie. He just died -- but only for 5 minutes. All the crap he's done to his body over the years, and it's a flu that killed him! But while he was gone, he saw a vision of a woman's face and realized that it was time to escape, to ditch the baggage of being horny, rich, lonely John Johnson and to lose himself. To disappear. Wouldn't it be nice if they were to find themselves and get together? In many ways a reprise of Girlfriend in a Coma (60,000 copies sold in paperback in its first three months...) , Miss Wyoming represents a further leap forwards into the World According to Coupland -- a witty, genuinely funny look at who we are, how we can change, and how we can make a difference.

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Quantity

3 in stock

More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: 1st. Edition
Publisher: Flamingo
Published: Feb 2000

ISBN 10: 0002259834
ISBN 13: 9780002259835

Media Reviews
Praise for Girlfriend in a Coma: 'An ambitious new urban myth... Coupland has managed to marry a parable to his sociological observational skills, at the same time avoiding a mawkish, sentimental story... A dark, prescient book, a meditation on the mystery of life, the next step in a continuing search for meaning.' Mike Bradley, The Times 'A millennial novel of a very subtle and interesting kind. It's visually brilliant, full of extraordinary imagery, fresh like new paint. I was absolutely knocked over by it.' Tom Paulin, Late Review