Cheryl is a seventeen year old girl who is married to Jason, and she is a member of Youth Alive!, which is a club of religious students.

They then turn their attention to Cheryl and her friends, and Cheryl becomes the final casualty. Douglas Coupland?s Hey Nostradamus! The story opens with a Columbine-like school massacre. Reg repents of the way he treated both Jason and Kent and regrets that he destroyed his relationship with a woman named Ruth because he would not divorce Jason's mother. Before Cheryl is murdered she witnesses Jason killing one of the gunman with a rock, distracting the other for long enough that the other students are able to subdue and murder the final gunman. Hey Nostradamus! It begins with an uneasy, unforgettable, and catastrophic event and then goes in to detail about how it affects each character's life.Cheryl talks to us between life and death about who she is, her relationship with God, Jason, and others around her; Jason, who is writing to his brother's twin sons, talks of the shooting, his anti-social life style, and the grief he has been through; Heather, who narrates diary-style, tells us about her life as a court stenographer, her relationship with Jason, and her growing but uncomfortable friendship with Reg; and fCreate your own unique website with customizable templates. Coupland began to write the novel in December 2001, after a "nightmarish 40-city tour that began on 10 September". HEY NOSTRADAMUS Download Hey Nostradamus ebook PDF or Read Online books in PDF, EPUB, and Mobi Format.

Well it was fun for a while then they broke up and she got into crystal meth, found religion and turned into a lesbian. is … Moving the school shooting phenomenon out of its historical and cultural context is not just curious and perhaps irresponsible, but it nearly turns the shooting spree that opens the book into a plot device. He pens a letter to his twin nephews, born after his older brother, Kent, dies in a car accident. He is Jason's father. is built around a day in the lives of two North Vancouver high school students – the day a gang of gun-wielding teen misfits open fire in the cafeteria. Section #1: Narrated by Cheryl. Despite claiming to not want money Allison begins to extort money from Heather to pass on her messages. But now Jason has gone missing. Religion & Spirituality > Religious Fiction. When Heather confronts the woman she reveals she is Cecilia's daughter but her mother came to know of the language because Jason came to her with detailed notes wanting to pass along the information if he ever went missing.

because he touches on all aspects in his novel, from religion, to death to romance Behold, I tell you a mystery; Hey Nostradamus! It would be redundant and mundane to prattle on about video game violence and the crumbling of the American family as root causes for the shooting. “Hey Nostradamus!” is divided into four sections, with a different character narrating each section.

As he continues the letter to his twin nephews he tells them how he received three letters himself, one from each member of Cheryl’s family. Fast forward 11 years from the previous section and teenaged Jason is now an adult. This production gets 5 …

was on my reading list before I discovered Audible.com The book is worth reading in any format. Cheryl is in a religious group called "Youth Alive".

Book Summary and Study Guide Detailed plot synopsis reviews of Hey Nostradamus!

I'm very much a fan of JG Ballard, where you have people in this fantastically quotidian situation that goes suddenly wrong, and how people deal with that.

Section #3: Narrated by Heather. Over time, though, Coupland began to find his niche as a writer. She sees Cecilia with a young woman she assumes is her daughter and believes that Jason and the young woman had been having an affair. by Douglas Coupland 244pp, Flamingo, pounds 15.99 Hey Nostradamus! He loses his story and never gets it back. Hey Nostradamus! Coupland always delivers well-written books that are deserving of the readers' time and money. Coupland staked his reputation conferring the name Generation X on the disaffected slacker generation of the early '90s, a dubious achievement indeed and probably not something to brag about at dinner parties. In these early works, as is so often the case with painters and sculptors turned writers, a visual arts background didn�t translate into image-intensive fiction but instead manifested itself in bouts of ponderousness.

Hey Nostradamus!