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by Jonathan Safran Foer
In a word (or two or three): this title--and trying to remember which
adverb goes where--is killing me
From Mr. Hipster:
I gotta say that I almost thought about
buying this one in hardcover because I just couldn't wait to read
it. The thought of carrying it around in my stupid bag--and a strange,
tortuous thing I like to do with my buying willpower--had me wait
until the day it came out in paperback to buy it from Amazon. I then
let it sit on the shelf a little to age like a fine wine. I think
my stalling was as much building up the anticipation as much as it
was staving off disappointment. After all, how could anything live
up to Everything
is Illuminated? Figuring there was a little less to laugh about
in a book about a young boy who loses his father in the World Trade
Center on September 11, I knew the chuckles would most likely be few
and far between. And while I smiled a few times during my reading,
and may have snickered a time or two, this was a more somber story
than his last. That's not to say it was dark or gloomy by any means,
but both the themes of loneliness, loss and unrequited love, and September
11th obviously temper the sunniness of the whole thing. Of course
Foer tells it in his wacky, whimsical way that turns on the postmodern
quirks (there are pages that have nothing but a photo of a doorknob
sprinkled throughout the book), but manages to tell a compelling story
that is both extremely readable and at times tear-inducingly sad.
The story is told through the eyes of a very precocious nine-year-old,
Oskar Schell, who is on a mission to find the owner of a key that
he finds among the possessions of his father, who was killed in the
World Trade Center attacks. Oskar is a peculiar child who shows odd
signs of Asperger's (although it's never mentioned in the text), but
is in any case very smart for his age and will only wear white clothes. He also has
strange, almost Autisitc-like reactions to his many interactions with the myriad adults
he encounters in his quests. The character, and the main narrative
itself, in fact, reminds me somewhat of The
Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time. Like Illuminated,
there are several other narratives that weave themselves into the
main line, all related to ancestors and relatives of Oskar's. They
mostly come in the form of letters and journals and photos. Ultimately
the story revolves around the meaning of family and their influence
on our lives. Foer really is an amazing writer. He could make a Greek
diner menu compelling and impactful using his simple, poetic style.
I definitely won't wait to buy the next one.
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Other
titles Jonathan Safran Foer:Everything
is Illuminated |
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