Jennifer Egan's latest novel, A Visit from the Goon Squad, is not your typical novel. And that was fine with me. In many ways, the novel reminded me of movies like Babel and Crash. Various people become interconnected and their lives collide, creating a complicated tapestry.
The book follows the lives of two main characters-- Bennie, a musician turned music executive, and his former assistant Sasha. We get glimpses of their lives as children, as teenagers, and as full-fledged adults. We often get these glimpses into their lives from the viewpoints of others who come into contact with them. We read about Alex, who dated Sasha, and later ends up connected to Bennie. We read about Ted, Sasha's uncle, who hunts her down in Italy. We read about Stephanie, Bennie's wife (for awhile) and a PR executive. These stories cover the past, present, and the future. The stories happen in California, New York, Italy, an unnamed foreign country. One chapter of the novel is done in Powerpoint by Sasha's 12-year-old daughter.
What Egan does well is capture the sadness and sometimes the desperation of people's lives. Identity, a theme in her writing, shows up again here. Who we are, she seems to say, is an amalgam of what people think we are.
Egan is one of my favorite contemporary writers. I highly recommend A Visit from the Goon Squad. For another excellent book by Egan, check out Look at Me, which is also about image and identity.
Just One Pink gives A Visit from the Goon Squad a 9.
Friday, June 25, 2010
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