A Visit from the Goon Squad Jennifer Egan 9780307477477 Books
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A Visit from the Goon Squad Jennifer Egan 9780307477477 Books
A Visit from the Goon Squad, by Jennifer Egan is a very highly acclaimed winner of the 2011 Pulitzer Prize. I would say that the style is unique, but having recently finished reading Cloud Atlas, I see similarities. As in Cloud Atlas, A Visit from the Goon Squad features a highly non-linear narrative form, with a series of vignettes beginning in the present day, proceeding backward in time, with characters in the preceding story playing a leading role in those that follow. After four such stories, we follow the characters through a series of stories back to the present day and into the future, though not necessarily in chronological order and skipping from one character to another.Unlike Cloud Atlas, the characters in the stories in A Visit from the Goon Squad are consistent and closely related, the stories therefore being more easily followed and the transitions smoother. The stories are intriguing and captivating. This is a far better reading experience than Cloud Atlas.
Nevertheless, leaving and returning to a variety of characters, at points in the past and in the future, in no particular order, has the potential for confusion and periods of reacclimation. Such was the case here, at times, though not to the extent of seriously affecting the reading experience. Having said that, I read the entire book in only three or four days. Stretching the book out over a period of weeks could result in the potential for becoming lost or losing track of the characters. Despite being listed as having 342 pages, roughly 50 are consumed with a rather silly stretch of "powerpoint slides". The book can be easily consumed in 4-5 hours.
Tags : A Visit from the Goon Squad [Jennifer Egan] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. Bennie is an aging former punk rocker and record executive. Sasha is the passionate, troubled young woman he employs. Here Jennifer Egan brilliantly reveals their pasts,Jennifer Egan,A Visit from the Goon Squad,Anchor,0307477479,Psychological,Older men,Older men;Fiction.,Psychological fiction,Punk rock musicians,Punk rock musicians;Fiction.,Sound recording executives and producers,Sound recording executives and producers;Fiction.,Young women,FICTION Coming of Age,FICTION Literary,FICTION Psychological,Fiction,Fiction - General,Fiction-Psychological,FictionShort Stories (single author),GENERAL,General Adult,Literary,Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945),POPULAR AMERICAN FICTION,Reference General,Short Stories (single author),United States,pulitzer prize books;jennifer egan books;jennifer egan;women;award winning fiction;award winning books;national book award finalists;pulitzer prize winners fiction;pulitzer prize winners;pulitzer prize winning books;coming of age;american fiction;american literature;contemporary;contemporary fiction;drugs;dystopia;family;friends;growing up;literature;music industry;literary;literary fiction;postmodern;music business;psychological fiction;musicians;music;aging;national book critics circle award,pulitzer prize winners fiction; pulitzer prize winners; pulitzer prize winning books; coming of age; american fiction; american literature; contemporary; contemporary fiction; drugs; dystopia; family; friends; growing up; literature; music industry; literary; literary fiction; postmodern; music business; psychological fiction; women; musicians; music; aging; national book critics circle award; national book award finalists; award winning fiction; award winning books; jennifer egan books; jennifer egan; pulitzer prize books,FICTION Coming of Age,FICTION Literary,FICTION Psychological,FictionShort Stories (single author),Literary,Reference General,Short Stories (single author),Fiction - General,Popular American Fiction,Fiction,Modern & contemporary fiction (post c 1945)
A Visit from the Goon Squad Jennifer Egan 9780307477477 Books Reviews
I bought this book after reading a review in The New Yorker. It was a positive review, so I decided to give her earlier works a try. I am very disappointed. I knew it was supposed to be kind of hip, but in fact it felt clumsy and self-conscious. I realize the book sold well, but I'm sure I won't be reading any of her more recent works.
Not only is the writing unobtrusively perfect, but the structure of this book is a delightful mystery. Complete characters, inventive presentation...a treasure for literature lovers!
I REALLY wanted to love this story. I thought I would. Typically, any book that involves the music biz with its myriad characters that come in every shade and style of humanity completely engrosses me. I love the irreverence, the wild ride of rock & roll mixed with the roller coaster that is life in the city, life growing up, life in the push and pull of families; heartache, mental illness, etc., so this should've knocked my socks off. I wanted it to, but it didn't.
Maybe it was my state of mind, I don't know, but there was not one emotional punch that landed with me. The characters were cleverly constructed, with lots of smart dialogue and angst-ridden plot points, but I was not moved by a one. And, frankly, even after repeatedly checking the book description to remind myself of who characters were and what they were supposed to be doing, their outlines somehow kept disappearing in the meandering narrative. I couldn't keep them straight, and their vignettes and individual chapters (often with bouncing time-lines and seemingly little connection) were indistinct and, for me, ultimately forgettable.
At times I felt the writer was working too hard to be clever the Power Point display towards the top of the third act (or maybe the third of four acts?) was likely meant to convey some sort of meaning, but on an e-reader it was illegible and though a weblink was offered, even that suggestion was emblematic of the problem the device took me out of the story; it was pages and pages and pages, and had I actually left my book to go look at this on a website, I'd've LITERALLY been taken out of the story! As it was, I skipped ahead, just wanting to grab onto some thread that kept me as connected as possible to the difficult-to-follow narrative.
For me it never got there. There were some interesting, well written sections, but it wasn't cohesive enough to really impel this reader forward to find out what was going to happen. I did get to the end...and then...it was over. That was about it. It left no mark.
All art is subjective, I understand that, and clearly this is a case where my perspective is somewhat out-of-sync Egan has won enough awards for this book, including the Pulitzer Prize, to make clear that whatever has eluded me was less of a problem for others! So be it. She is a skilled writer, with a mastery of language, and this may just be one piece of her work that did not resonate. Perhaps another of her books will.
This book was so much different than what I expected. I certainly wasn't expecting a narrative told in separate connected stories (think Olive Kitteridge, The Tsar of Love and Techno), that's for sure. It's a bold approach, and it works.
The back cover of the book does a pretty apt job explaining it it's about aging punk rock record executive Bennie and his younger troubled assistant, Sasha. It's indirectly about them, at least. After starting off with stories focused on Bennie and Sasha as the main characters, the other stories are about people who knew them throughout their lives. Bennie and Sasha serve as the connecting thread that binds everyone together.
This kind of narrative is gutsy because you have to make sure a) each story is interesting in its own right while b) holding the reader's attention with so many different characters and c) maintaining enough of a connection to the central characters that it doesn't feel random.
Here, Egan succeeds on all fronts. With captivating characters and intellectually stimulating prose, she kept me fully engaged and eager to read each succeeding story. She even plays around with form in an exhilarating way; one story (one of my favorites) is told as a sort of PowerPoint presentation from the perspective of a young girl.
I enjoyed this book immensely in spite of not connecting with it emotionally as much as I did intellectually.
A Visit from the Goon Squad, by Jennifer Egan is a very highly acclaimed winner of the 2011 Pulitzer Prize. I would say that the style is unique, but having recently finished reading Cloud Atlas, I see similarities. As in Cloud Atlas, A Visit from the Goon Squad features a highly non-linear narrative form, with a series of vignettes beginning in the present day, proceeding backward in time, with characters in the preceding story playing a leading role in those that follow. After four such stories, we follow the characters through a series of stories back to the present day and into the future, though not necessarily in chronological order and skipping from one character to another.
Unlike Cloud Atlas, the characters in the stories in A Visit from the Goon Squad are consistent and closely related, the stories therefore being more easily followed and the transitions smoother. The stories are intriguing and captivating. This is a far better reading experience than Cloud Atlas.
Nevertheless, leaving and returning to a variety of characters, at points in the past and in the future, in no particular order, has the potential for confusion and periods of reacclimation. Such was the case here, at times, though not to the extent of seriously affecting the reading experience. Having said that, I read the entire book in only three or four days. Stretching the book out over a period of weeks could result in the potential for becoming lost or losing track of the characters. Despite being listed as having 342 pages, roughly 50 are consumed with a rather silly stretch of "powerpoint slides". The book can be easily consumed in 4-5 hours.
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