I've heard absolutely nothing but good things from everyone I've encountered about Jennifer Egan's A Visit from the Goon Squad. Cathleen Schine adds her voice in the NYRB:
Jennifer Egan’s new novel is a moving humanistic saga, an enormous nineteenth-century-style epic brilliantly disguised as ironic postmodern pastiche. It has thirteen chapters, each an accomplished short story in its own right; characters who meander in and out of these chapters, brushing up against one another’s lives in unexpected ways; a time frame that runs from 1979 to the near, but still sci-fi, future; jolting shifts in time and points of view—first person, second person, third person, Powerpoint person; and a social background of careless and brutal sex, careless and brutal drugs, and carefully brutal punk rock. All of this might be expected to depict the broken, alienated angst of modern life as viewed through the postmodern lens of broken, alienated irony. Instead, Egan gives us a great, gasping, sighing, breathing whole.
Sorta bums me out that Egan's was the rare title that failed to find its way to Chez TEV, so I can't comment firsthand, but the book's boosters have convinced me to tag this one "Worthy Titles" ...
"Sorta bums me out that Egan's was the rare title that failed to find its way to Chez TEV"--I'm sorry, but do you realize how this sounds? You could buy a copy or get one from the library, couldn't you?
Posted by: Leslie | October 27, 2010 at 07:00 AM
It's a wonderful book.
Posted by: Pamela | October 27, 2010 at 09:12 AM