A self-portrait from the digital generation, GOOD/GRIEF is an adventure through the anxieties of growing up, told in a memorable, unorthodox format. Combine Koppel's ingenious QuickCam images with his hilarious way with words and you have an arresting six almost mythic incidents from Koppel's childhood, including the trauma of first pubic hairs and the realization that dancing with his mother can be kind of . . . well, you know, strange. It's just like a children's book--except it's for adults. By turns humorous, scary, tender, and always disarming, GOOD/GRIEF introduces a born storyteller.
I have literally no idea what the point of this book is. It makes absolutely no sense, and I’m not sure if it’s meant to be comical or not, but it is definitely the furthest thing from funny. I know it claims to be for people with ADD, but even so, I don’t see the point. Anyways, now that I wasted the last 10 minutes reading and reviewing this, I am moving on to the next task at hand...