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The Globe and Mail review of Happiness™ (aka. "Generica"):

Joseph Kertes is the director of the Humber School of Writing and the Humber School of Comedy, and the author most recently of the novel Boardwalk.

The decline and fall of practically everything
Joseph Kertes

In a country that produced Mack Sennett, Wayne and Shuster, Mike Myers, Catherine O'Hara and Martin Short--not to mention Stephen Leacock, Paul Quarrington and Mordecai Richler--you would think that clever, witty writers like Will Ferguson grew on trees and loaded up bushel baskets with ripe, hilarious books. But they rarely do.

Our literary and other artistic endeavours are often dire and earnest. They suggest loneliness, despair and desolation.

But not always. Loneliness, despair and other dark forces have a bright side, too, or at least a hilarious one in the hands of this gifted novelist. Before this production, Will Ferguson had published a few non-fiction books, also very funny and poignant, including Why I Hate Canadians, a book in which we discover why Ferguson secretly loves Canadians as he mocks himself and us.

Generica, similarly, might easily have been called Why I Hate Humanity, and Ferguson might subtly reward us with the opposite: He might mourn our wantonness and self-centredness--all the while gently divulging his hope that wisdom and love will prevail in the end no matter what.

Generica is the story of Edwin de Valu, a junior editor at Panderic Press who lives among his slush piles and whose office is situated amid "Buildings without laughter. Buildings without irony." Manuscripts arrive unbidden and, with barely a nod, Edwin begins his standard response:

    "On behalf of Panderic Inc, I would like to thank
    you . . . Unfortunately, after careful consideration and much editorial debate, we have regrettably concluded that your book does not meet our current editorial needs."

Until one day Edwin receives What I Learned on the Mountain, the self-help book to end all self-help books. It solves all the problems of the universe; how to feel better about yourself, how to quit smoking, how to lose weight, how to make better love, how to get rich, how to expel inner demons and vanquish outer ones and whatever else you need. The book is an amalgam of hackneyed thoughts strung out over 1,000 pages. The book's author, Tupak Soiree, in his covering letter offers Edwin his best advice; "Live! Love! Learn!" To which Edwin wants to respond, "Go! Fuck! Yourself!".

But Panderic needs a new self-help author because "Mr. Ethics," Panderic's successful self-help author, has been imprisoned for tax evasion, so Edwin is instructed to sign up Tupak Soiree. What I Learned on the Mountain is not only published, but it also becomes the most successful book ever, outstripping The Celestine Prophecy by 50 million copies.

It is here that Ferguson's hilarious romp merges with bold satire. The word "happiness" is trademarked by Tupak and Panderic. Everyone becomes happy (except for tobacco and alcohol company executives, who throw themselves off buildings); People stop worrying about their weight, quit their vices, make heavenly love, pick up Tupak's stock tips and get rich; even Edwin (briefly). Tupak invades the networks. EdwinÕs wife Jenni and his girlfriend May are forever smiling; his colleagues put up "Gone Fishin'" signs on their cubicles and leave their jobs forever, returning only as volunteers.

But is this a world of real laughter, real pleasure, real love? Are people happy or merely satisfied? Do these states not require the opposite--sadness, for instance? Does a society of smilers not need rebels? Do we not need to say to ourselves, "If only" and "Maybe someday" in order to keep the fires of real passion burning? Have people become automatons? Have their eyes glazed over in this freak show of contentment like the eyes in Village of the Damned? Naturally, Edwin never converts to Tupak's cult. His wife Jenni turns their bank account over to Tupak and joins his harem. May enlists in a convent of perpetual smilers. Edwin watches and realizes Tupak has become the "Stalin of the New Age." He has "released a neutron bomb of love upon the world." All systems are ultimately alike as they harden into dogma: Capitalism, Communism and now Tupak's Generica. It remains for Edwin to stop the menace.

In a surprisingly moving ending to this uncompromising and brilliant satire, Ferguson serves up his true thematic feast. We are all, in our own ways, fleeing our doom, fleeing our decline, our inevitable mortality. But blindness and blandness will get us nowhere.

 

The Globe & Mail
April 28, 2001

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