laurie
Written on May 22, 2017
Having spent many years working remotely for US companies - try explaining that a 'traditional Canadian summer evening' is literally Muskoka chairs, a 2-4, and a lake, the sounds of a loon in the background - I feel Meyers' pain at trying to forge an identity of a nation without much of an identity. (We uh, we're funny, sarcastic, and we say 'Sorry' a lot.)
What bugged me was the dichotomy of the history lessons mixed in with the funny, and I found myself skimming to get back to the funny. I wanted more stories of the Canadians - SCTV, Hilarious House of Frankenstein, Kids in the Hall - and less of a 'Hey, Look, Canada has history, here's an abbreviated lesson just to prove it.'
But if you remember being asked 'Do you wanna go faster?' or the lonesome call of 'Doggie Doggie', or just want to know why the heck you'd have heard that, you need to read this book.
See this review and others on my blog.