Reviews

Better Living Through Plastic Explosives by Zsuzsi Gartner

imjustmea's review against another edition

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3.0

Zsuszi Gartner' s delivers a sharp collection of short-stories filled with dark humour and snark. At first I thought the stories were just bizarre but then I found myself chuckling at some of Gartner's outlandish metaphors or agreeing with the strange reasoning of her characters.I was sucked in and I decided to surrender to the wonderful weirdness of the stories.

A few of my favourites:

"Once, We Were Swedes" - a journalist who's now teaching at a college is drifting apart from her spouse. She reminisces about the early stages of their relationship when they used to talk IKEA to each other. Loved the glossary at the end of the story.

"Floating Like a Goat" - a young mother writes a letter to her daughter's grade one art teacher. A wonderful rant about stifled creativity and lost dreams.

"We Come In Peace" - angels are sent to inhabit the bodies of five teenagers to experience the earthly senses. Divinity is no match for teenage hormones and high school drama.

This collection is not filled with happy endings and we wouldn't all agree with the characters' thoughts and actions (at least not in public) but that's what makes these short-stories a must-read, the opportunity to explore different, not-so-traditional views in a fun, entertaining way. If you are looking for the unusual, pick-up this collection.

eososray's review against another edition

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4.0

Part of the charm of this collection for me was that fact that it is set in an geographical area I know well. The attitudes, places and social commentary are what I have grown up with and I found it highly amusing to read about it even though I'm not sure I "got" the points to all the stories.

ianridewood's review against another edition

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dark funny reflective fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.5

solitarysoul's review against another edition

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3.0

I liked 2 or 3 of the stories quite a bit; the rest I've already forgotten

rachelini's review against another edition

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4.0

Nominated for a Giller Prize this year. I would likely never had read this if I didn't toss all the Giller nominees on hold at the library, simply due to my lack of interest in short stories. But I'm glad I did. Some of these stories were great, off-kilter, slightly weird, and very funny. And mostly set in Vancouver, which was fun after all the Toronto authors I've been reading. And then some of them I skipped after the first few pages. But I'm definitely going to keep an eye out for other books by this author, particularly if they're novels instead.

sawyerbell's review against another edition

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3.0

Surreal and sometimes funny. As with all short story collections, some were good and others weren't.

zoemig's review against another edition

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Better Living Through Plastic Explosives is the second collection of short stories by Zsuzsi Gartner, who previous published All the Anxious Girls on Earth over a decade ago. The dark satire present throughout the collection often reminded me of Super Sad True Love Story by Gary Shteyngart, a novel I unfortunately did not enjoy. For example in "Once We Were Swedes", Gartner writes:

"It was the year provincial health insurance had started covering Botox injections and teeth-whitening technology for the disenfranchised."

Offering the same kind of dystopian culture critique and later even describes the woman as having "pillowy Jolie LipsTM". It is the same story which centres around a woman who speaks to her husband in IKEA slang, complete with a glossary at the end, she says things such as "Slabang" which means funny (alarm clock)- but I just didn't find the concept slabang. That was the problem I had almost instantly with Better Living Through Plastic Explosives, I simply don't find this kind of writing funny, and because the dark humour is almost by definition, emotionally distant, I didn't find myself connecting with the characters either. That's not to say I didn't enjoy portions or find them specific parts interesting, but it never got to the point where I was excited about the writing.

My favourite story in the collection was probably the very strange, "Floating Like a Goat", which is a letter from a mother written to her daughter's first grade teacher when she learns her daughter did not meet expectations in art class, "What I would like to focus on is your insistence that a drawing is not complete until the child has filled in the background." she writes.

In "Someone Is Killing the Great Motivational Speakers of Amerika", motivational speakers hide out in the woods for reasons I could never quite discern but I believe had something to do with bioenergetics though I am also not quite sure what that is or what the characters connection to it was. The characters themselves have a variety of interesting names, from Cinders to Pudding, although if those are their actual names or supposed to be nicknames I don't know. The story is full of mentions of current technology as being outdated, old Nintendo DS, nanos, and the new new Conan O'Brien show, but to me it felt mostly like meaningless name-dropping- it provided context but it didn't emotionally connect or even make me laugh.

One glitch that really bothered me happened in the final story, the title on in the collection, "Better Living Through Plastic Explosives" about a terrorist turned suburban mom. I was reading an advance copy, so hopefully this was fixed in the finished edition, but the main character's name switches back and worth from Victoria to Lucy which was very distracting. Unless somehow I was confused and they are actually two characters, in which case the story was even more over my head than I initially thought.

The collection as a whole comments on modern culture, twisting things to the extreme and then showing the reader what the distorted view looks like. At times this was interesting, but overall, Better Living Through Plastic Explosives was just not meant for me. I have already read plenty of positive reviews and there is nothing technically wrong with Gartner's writing, so I can honestly say this was a matter of preference. If you enjoy the kind of stories I have described in this review and Gartner's dark sense of satire, then you are likely to have a much better experience with Better Living Through Plastic Explosives than I did.

renee_pompeii's review against another edition

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2.0

Me too dumb to read literary fiction. Especially Canadian literary fiction.

ctort's review against another edition

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4.0

The back cover calls to fans of Douglas Coupland and George Saunders, which I originally felt was a cheap way to get people to purchase the book by name-dropping. But it really does fit, maybe even throw in a dash of Salinger's Nine Stories. Modern, hip, slightly surreal satire.

koby's review against another edition

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3.0

This collection of short stories promised a lot, based on its reviews. However, it didn't capture my attention. While each short story was well-written and thought-provoking, it somehow fell short. I felt like the stories were too similar. It also felt too "self-aware" - like, as the author was writing, she was wryly smiling in amusement of herself. I get that it was satirical, but it just didn't do it for me. I gave it three stars because it of its strong traits, but I never felt connected to it, which is, ultimately, what makes a story for me.