Fiction Short Stories (single Author)
Channel Surfing in the Sea of Happiness
- Publisher
- Cormorant Books
- Initial publish date
- May 2024
- Category
- Short Stories (single author), General, Absurdist
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9781770867499
- Publish Date
- May 2024
- List Price
- $24.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
“Babineau’s delightful sense of humour, his way of drawing us so fully into the worlds of his characters and, perhaps most important, his ability to bring queer history to life all contribute to a deeply satisfying reading experience.” — Plenitude Magazine
Channel Surfing in the Sea of Happiness is an iconoclastic romp through the end of the twentieth century. The misfit characters in this funny and poignant collection of stories find themselves adrift in an increasingly absurdist world — a world they must reinvent for themselves in order to find hope. How much of our identity is forged by direct experience, and how much is shaped by our constant exposure to a barrage of images and ideas imposed on us from elsewhere? From a story about a precocious teenage boy coming out in high school in the 1970s, to a series of tales about two queer con artists and their ridiculous get-rich-quick schemes, to a yarn about a famous transgender sex worker’s efforts to rally her community against redneck homophobes, to an account of a lesbian puppeteer’s AIDS activism in the 1980s, to a story about a sister coming to terms with her brother’s death from AIDS, the collection explores how the human heart stays afloat in a society entertaining, informing, and networking itself to death.
About the author
Guy Babineau is a writer, freelance journalist, and educator in fashion marketing and communications. His fiction, articles, and reviews have appeared in The Globe and Mail, Descant, The Georgia Straight, Xtra!, Xtra! West, Vancouver Magazine, The Vancouver Sun, and more. He is the recipient of a Vancouver Fashion Week Award for Journalism and a Vancouver LGBTQ+ Community Award for Writer of the Year. He loves photography and working out, is a superfan of RuPaul’s Drag Race, and is passionate about sustainable fashion. He was born in Toronto, Ontario and now lives in Victoria, British Columbia.
Editorial Reviews
“While the book’s original launch wound up sinking before its maiden voyage, this second edition carries new promise and even more relevance today than when it was first written. As the world faces an attack on the gay rights people have fought so hard for, we are encouraged to look to the past for inspiration on how to navigate the ever-more-threatening future.”
Nexus Newspaper
“I read this book on a very long train journey and absolutely loved it. It’s funny, forgiving, and brutally honest. Reminiscent of Christopher Isherwood’s Berlin Stories and Armistead Maupin’s Tales of the City, the characters weave in and out of each other’s seemingly unconnected lives until the unexpected but deeply satisfying final story. A slice of gay life during the worst years of the aids epidemic, the book never loses its warm heart and dry wit as the characters wrestle with the wars within and without. Mr. Babineau has an unerring sense of time and place. He conjures up a vivid portrait, filled with delightful travelling companions and deadpan humour. I highly recommend this book for journeys of all kinds — especially interior ones.”
Scott Thompson, actor, comic, The Kids in the Hall
“This book drew me in and kept my attention from first page to last. I hope to read more from this author in the future.”
Olio by Marilyn
"Babineau writes with a confident gay voice, full of quips and sharply off-kilter but richly descriptive comments that stay on the literary side of arch. But Channel Surfing in the Sea of Happiness is also populated by lesbians, trans folk, a pair of sexually ambiguous goths, and a hefty helping of heterosexuals who are not only comic relief.”
The British Columbia Review
“Babineau’s delightful sense of humour, his way of drawing us so fully into the worlds of his characters and, perhaps most important, his ability to bring queer history to life all contribute to a deeply satisfying reading experience.”
Plenitude Magazine