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Joyland

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Welcome to 1984 and the town of South Wakefield. Chris Lane is 14 and he's sure that he can see the future, or at least guess what's inside of Christie Brinkley's mind. But he can't foresee the closing of Joyland, the town’s only video arcade. With the arcade’s passing comes a summer of teenage lust, violence, and a search for new entertainment. Never far away is Chris’s younger sister, Tammy, who plays spy to the events that will change the lives of her family and town forever. Joyland is a novel about the impossibility of knowing the future. Schultz bring the Cold War home in a novel set to the digital pulse of video games and the echoes of hair metal. Joyland is illustrated throughout by graphic novelist Nate Powell, whose work has been praised by Sin City creator Frank Miller as “observant, intimate cartooning [that] surgically cuts to the bone.”

296 pages, Hardcover

First published April 1, 2006

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About the author

Emily Schultz

28 books260 followers
Emily Schultz is the co-founder of Joyland Magazine. Her newest novel, Little Threats, is forthcoming from GP Putnam's Sons for November 2020. Her novel, The Blondes, released in the U.S. with St. Martin’s Press and Picador, in France with Editions Asphalte, and in Canada with Doubleday. It was named a Best Book of 2015 by NPR and Kirkus. The Blondes was produced as a scripted podcast starring Madeline Zima, which has also been translated into French.

Schultz's writing has appeared in Elle, Slate, Evergreen Review, Vice, Today's Parent, Hazlitt, Minola Review, Black Warrior Review, and Prairie Schooner. She lives in Brooklyn where she is a producer with the indie media company Heroic Collective.

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5 stars
22 (18%)
4 stars
39 (33%)
3 stars
24 (20%)
2 stars
22 (18%)
1 star
9 (7%)
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
5,870 reviews146 followers
June 15, 2019
Joyland is a standalone debut novel written by Canadian author Emily Schultz and illustrated by Nate Powell. It centers on two siblings Tammy and Chris Lane in the small town of South Wakefield, when their last source of entertainment – a video arcade named Joyland is closing and the troubles they go through during that particular Summer of '84.

This book serves as an entry (Two books with the same/very similar titles) in the Toronto Public Library Advanced Reading Challenge 2019. The other book is of the same title, but written by Stephan King.

Tammy Lane, a precocious 11-year-old, spends much of her time spying on her adored 14-year-old brother, Chris, and occasionally on her neighbors, while up a nearby tree. She has also been known to lurk, stalk and eavesdrop. Summer is almost here but the news that the town's only video arcade, Joyland, is about to close, has cast a pall over the town's youth, as there is literally nothing left to do in the small town of South Wakefield.

Frightened at the potentially endless emptiness and ennui ahead of them, Chris Lane and his friends stagger into their holidays. South Wakefield offers few other distractions: a parade, the possibility of a dreary job, swimming, a few boring sports, the odd party, but there is little else to do, but get into trouble, like drinking, try to score drugs, and smoke. Eventually, Chris does what any 14-year-old youth does whenever he runs out of things to do: he lusts. The object of his carnal obsession is Laurel Richards, a streetwise video queen.

Joyland is written rather well. Each chapter is named after a video game: Galaga, Frogger, Venture, Defender, Pac-Man and then is further divided into player 1 and 2, the two voices of Tammy and Chris Lane. Tammy Lane's quieter, slower, more reflective and all encompassing and Chris Lane's driven, intense, narrow and fast-paced.

All in all, Joyland is a wonderfully coming of age stories of two siblings in a small town in the eighties when their last source of entertainment is closing.
Profile Image for Annett.
68 reviews
August 28, 2018
This is quite possibly a case of having grown up in a very different world from the characters in the novel and being unable to relate to the story emotionally. I didn't feell that wave of nostalgia hitting me in the heart, and so I must conclude that we're just not a good match, this book and me.
Profile Image for Sean Kottke.
1,964 reviews30 followers
January 4, 2019
This double coming of age story gets the touchstones of early adolescence in the brave new digital culture of 1984 pitch perfect. Set in southern Ontario, it could just as easily have been the north central Indiana or middle Michigan of my youth, so recognizably the setting is developed. The story wasn't as compelling for me, feeling more like a slice of life trajectory within a particular time and place. The titular Joyland makes a major change from arcade to video store that marked an astonishing shift in amusement from my own life that I had never contemplated before. That's something I would like to have explored more.
Profile Image for Ian Carpenter.
734 reviews12 followers
November 11, 2018
This caught me at a super impatient time and the pace of the book just didn't jibe with me. The writing's good, the characters deep and pleasing, but I found myself dying for it to get to something meaningful for me. The book circled it's final destination and built to it too slowly for me. But as it got closer, it got better and the final moments are excellent (though I still wonder if it would make a much better short story). A mixed experience for me despite all the cultural touchstones I shared with the writer and one of their videogame obsessed characters.
Profile Image for Liza.
103 reviews9 followers
May 16, 2020
Quick read. Subtly done coming of age story that somehow reminded me of To Kill a Mockingbird in it's ability to show insights into adolescence. Great tie-ins thematically and imaginatively with early 80s arcade and video games (Atari!). Powell's illustrations are stark, essentialized glimpses into the world of the characters.
Profile Image for Hans.
15 reviews3 followers
August 31, 2025
Not what I expected. Stephen King`s book of the same name was lots better.
671 reviews2 followers
October 30, 2014
Emily Schultz's clever and engaging coming-of-age story certainly is brilliant in many ways despite some flaws.

I found the video game format really interesting but the continual shift in point of view between Tammy and Chris to be a bit disorienting. I also found it easier to identify with Tammy although really, I feel that Chris is the main character.

Still, I would always prefer to read a flawed book by a writer who is willing to take risks than a work by a writer who smoothly follows a formula. Emily Schultz never does the latter and I have enjoyed all of the books that I have read by her so far.
Profile Image for D.J. Sylvis.
141 reviews34 followers
January 11, 2008
Interesting fiction, with video-game and pop culture references so eerily picture-perfect that I wonder if she doesn't have a time machine ... but for all that, I was disappointed in the way the book resolves itself, and I'm left a little less impressed by her storytelling skills than her picture-perfect research skills / memory.

Still, I wouldn't give it four stars if it wasn't worth checking out.
Profile Image for Jason.
Author 16 books8 followers
November 3, 2008
Set in southern Ontario in the 80s, on the day the local arcade closed down, Joyland spoke to me. The chapters are named after arcade games and the sections alternating the POV between a brother and sister are labeled Player I and Player II. It was downright strange reading paragraphs describing the gameplay of Galaga, or the different levels of the Atari 2600 Combat.

But as well as the nostalgia there was also a story of summer transformations, and the shifting landscape of teenaged life.
Profile Image for Suzanne.
Author 4 books138 followers
June 12, 2009
Although not quite as good as I had hoped it would be, I was still mostly satisfied with my first Emily Schultz book. The concept was brilliant, the imagery was beautiful, and the characters were excellent, but I wasn't completely content with how things wrapped up (although I should note that I think the epilogue was perfectly done). Still, I'm very much looking forward to reading more of Schultz's work, especially Heaven is Small.
Profile Image for Bruce.
101 reviews
September 14, 2013
As an adolescent child growing up in a small Ontario town enjoying arcades, how could I not like this book? Schultz nails down the 80's pop-culture to a T. The chapters reference a whole slew of popular arcade games in the early 80's - video games I really enjoyed myself.

If you didn't play these video games, you may feel lost in some of the imagery. Thankfully, they connected well with me.
Profile Image for Jayne.
598 reviews
September 7, 2014
The story brought tears to my eyes at the end. This novel of Kings reminded more of the early Alice Hoffman stories with a cast of unique and distinct characters that I found endearing and authentic amid the mysterious and spiritual themes.
Profile Image for Christine.
157 reviews1 follower
September 5, 2015
This was on Steven King's must read list, but it didn't really hold my interest. Maybe it was well-written. Maybe I just don't like reading about kids who are wasting their lives. Maybe I don't like the seminal event happening in the second-to-last chapter.
Profile Image for J.R. Miller.
Author 2 books7 followers
September 24, 2014
This was a fun read…took me back to when I was a kid. If you're from detroit (maybe Windsor but drive into Detroit) you might see the error. But you'll get over it pretty quick.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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