ILX Book Club - Jennifer Egan: A Visit from the Goon Squad

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (545 of them)

when i went to look up her age i figured she was gonna be like 30something, not 50

max, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:30 (twelve years ago) link

she lives near me btw

max, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:30 (twelve years ago) link

I don't like her as a writer

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:33 (twelve years ago) link

never read anything she wrote though

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:33 (twelve years ago) link

i don't like YOU as a writer

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:34 (twelve years ago) link

that's untrue tbh

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:34 (twelve years ago) link

she's just one of those contemporary writers who has won a prize so I lump her in w/ people like franzen or zadie smith or whatever, whose work I'm familiar w/ and think will not last in any meaningful way, probably shouldn't though

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:35 (twelve years ago) link

it's so weird that that happened btw...i guess she was on the fast track (i get the sense she's literarily *connected* maybe) but when i was first reading look at me it felt like this undiscovered gem that if any literary tastemakers ran across it they would probably dismiss as chicklit.

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:37 (twelve years ago) link

of course she was getting published in the new yorker so i was wrong, i guess

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:38 (twelve years ago) link

now that I am talking about books on a thread big ups to aero for recc'ing the rodoreda

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:39 (twelve years ago) link

I am actually a really easy reader once I actually read something though and like p much everything so when I read this I probably won't hate her

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Monday, 26 September 2011 22:41 (twelve years ago) link

also, a lot of other good interviews on that show, hs, if yr not familiar. especially the robert stone ones.

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:50 (twelve years ago) link

jokes.

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:50 (twelve years ago) link

my hatred of robert stone is so kneejerk and reflects very poorly on me. it's basically the same as if someone dismissed egan as chicklit.

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:53 (twelve years ago) link

well he is very dudelit

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:55 (twelve years ago) link

marlboro man lit

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:56 (twelve years ago) link

god i know, right? i imagine he has a whiskey-roughened voice.

horseshoe, Monday, 26 September 2011 22:59 (twelve years ago) link

haha he actually kinda sounds like a kindly grandpa

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 23:01 (twelve years ago) link

but one thing i've learned listening to bookworm over the years is that insufferable writers tend to sound exactly like you'd think they would

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 23:04 (twelve years ago) link

for example franzen sounds like a total cock

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 23:04 (twelve years ago) link

If only! He sounds like a mare.

Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 23:07 (twelve years ago) link

actually i should probably rephrase that to "writers have the exact kind of speaking voices you'd expect from their books." for example, franzen sounds like a total cock. dennis cooper sounds like a slightly bewildered teenager with a lot of ums and ahs. bill vollmann sounds like a mildly creepy loner who's unused to leaving his own head. and et cetera.

strongo hulkington's ghost dad, Monday, 26 September 2011 23:07 (twelve years ago) link

Since so many of these writers teach, I wish they learned how to create a character. Speak with more authority, as if an audience of hundreds were in front of you. The alternative, of course, is worse: the bumbling pseudo-nebbish injecting "kinda" and "sort of" into every glistening pearl of a sentence as a character itself.

Anakin Ska Walker (AKA Skarth Vader) (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Monday, 26 September 2011 23:09 (twelve years ago) link

she is something like fifteen years older than i would have thought. huh.

thomp, Monday, 26 September 2011 23:23 (twelve years ago) link

Waterstones seem to have her old books in stock in nice matching reissues.

I read an old interview with her (in something called BELIEVER) and she certainly seemed OK in that.

PJ Miller, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 11:31 (twelve years ago) link

Another term for "stylistically flat" might be "conversational", which is, I think, what she is going for. There might be a bit too much conversational around, post-Franzen, but that's another debate.

Matt DC, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 11:46 (twelve years ago) link

Franzen isn't just conversational - he also writes striking, elegant, ambitious or lyrical descriptive prose, at times; quite a lot of times in The Corrections.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 11:58 (twelve years ago) link

my gf has the book with her right now but as soon as i get it back ill try to defend my claims about style

max, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 12:22 (twelve years ago) link

thank you! i immediately lent this book to a friend after reading it. i think egan's an amazing stylist but i can only defend with passages from her other novels rn.

horseshoe, Tuesday, 27 September 2011 13:26 (twelve years ago) link

two weeks pass...

Stevie was right, the LRB review (which I remembered to read tonight) was dire. I'm not quite sure why. A lot of phoney certainty for one thing. I think I am coming to detect a particular LRB house view or tone which I don't like so much.

But anyway it compared this book to JLG's DEUX OU TROIS CHOSES - very arbitrary - and quoted a totally mediocre passage of dialogue from an earlier JE book as though it was really great.

It was really irritating.

the pinefox, Tuesday, 11 October 2011 23:48 (twelve years ago) link

did you guys know that jennifer egan used to date steve jobs

max, Friday, 21 October 2011 20:26 (twelve years ago) link

Explains the tech fascination

Muammar for the road (Michael White), Friday, 21 October 2011 20:30 (twelve years ago) link

she was his rebound after he split with jane austen right

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Friday, 21 October 2011 20:30 (twelve years ago) link

ummm........ jane austen died in the 19th century...... i think u have ur facts wrong..........................

max, Friday, 21 October 2011 20:31 (twelve years ago) link

what is life

puff puff post (uh oh I'm having a fantasy), Friday, 21 October 2011 20:35 (twelve years ago) link

two months pass...

Just read the book, then this thread. I love ILX so much -- so much otm on this thread, w/r/t my mixed responses. The rockism, and the awkwardness with rock at once. (Which is why it reminded me also of Underworld, and Rushdie's attempts to write about rock).

Reading this, I thought about a line from Amis' The Information, I think, about how one shouldn't be able to say what a book is about, because it's about precisely every word in the book, not a slogan for a bumper sticker. Goon Squad, on the other hand, is a book which you can say what it's about -- maybe not on a bumper sticker, but close. I could feel the seams and joins, second-guess the decisions, and generally see the conceptual skeleton for each chapter. And between the skeleton and the chapter itself, I didn't think a great deal was added. The characters also felt underdeveloped -- a collection of tics and roles, but not really having a rich interior life, no real places where they struggle between what they wanted to express and what they were able to, etc. And the movement was very linear.

I figured the book could redeem itself from just being short-cuts style loosely linked short stories by tying everything up neatly with the last chapter. But instead the last chapter, which tried for exactly that, got sort of high-handed and really gave the game away. And the closing image was really juvenile and painful.

I should also say that I enjoy Egan as a writer though, on a micro-level. No real bravura turns of phrase or whatever, but solid and compelling prose.

But the real issue I have with it is moral. So it felt like a rockist, boomer fairy tale. And the most fairy tale element was that even though some people went very bad, for the most part, people didn't. They lived dangerously and did stupid things to their brains for prolonged periods, and then ended up essentially middle class. So the reassuring myth is that all that youthful dicking about and frying brain cells ends up with some meaning and purpose, as opposed to for the most part creating hopeless burnouts and detritus.

For aesthetic and truthful reasons, but also reasons of basic social responsibility, I think it's bad to glamorize idiocy. And even though there's this "oh, they'll grow out of it" element, there's also a sort of endorsement of self-indulgent self-destructiveness that conceals a great deal. So throughout, I kept comparing Goon Squad, to Richard Hell's Go Now, which is one of the few music novels I really enjoy, and finding it lacking in comparison.

s.clover, Sunday, 8 January 2012 10:47 (twelve years ago) link

Also, from some article linked above: "very postmodern in that 19th-century way". Really? It bothers me when people describe anything veering from a certain very narrowly realist novel that very few novels ever really were as "postmodern." This jumped out at me on one of the blurbs of my copy of Goon Squad, and I'm not surprised, though disappointed, that Egan would herself describe things the same sort of way.

s.clover, Sunday, 8 January 2012 15:15 (twelve years ago) link

what makes a 19th century novel "postmodern"?

lumber up, limbaugh down (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Sunday, 8 January 2012 15:28 (twelve years ago) link

I suppose Goon Squad is postmodern in the way that Dracula is postmodern.

Bon Ivoj (jaymc), Sunday, 8 January 2012 16:47 (twelve years ago) link

Postmodern like How I Met Your Mother...

s.clover, Sunday, 8 January 2012 22:46 (twelve years ago) link

I like Mr Clover's post!

the pinefox, Thursday, 12 January 2012 09:29 (twelve years ago) link

I am terribly nostalgic for the time when I was reading this book, not admiring it, and imagining that my life was not going very well. I had no idea.

the pinefox, Thursday, 12 January 2012 09:30 (twelve years ago) link

You mean things are worse now? I am sorry if so.

I haf downloaded some more Egan books. I might give one a try. THE KEEP, I think.

PJ Miller, Wednesday, 18 January 2012 19:10 (twelve years ago) link

Oh, they're much, much worse now. The decline has been almost unimaginable, at least to me with my limited imagination.

the pinefox, Thursday, 19 January 2012 13:17 (twelve years ago) link

One thing this has shown me is that I was largely mistaken to think that they were bad then.

the pinefox, Thursday, 19 January 2012 13:17 (twelve years ago) link

re: Bennie and his electrician dad, I see no logical issue with that passage.
I work in construction because my father did. There is zero chance I would be doing so otherwise.

Not all sons and daughters of contractors become contractors themselves, but trades and skills being passed via family is hardly an unknown concept.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Tuesday, 31 January 2012 07:01 (twelve years ago) link

Typing on my phone is a pain, but I thought the last chapter was an enormous misstep in an otherwise very good book. Baby iPods and oh those wacky prim post-Millenials &c., the entire chapter felt out of place and unnecessary.

Kiarostami bag (milo z), Tuesday, 31 January 2012 07:03 (twelve years ago) link

three weeks pass...

I am sorry to hear that (one month late), The Pinefox.

I hope things have improved.

PJ Miller, Friday, 24 February 2012 13:03 (twelve years ago) link

Thanks for your thoughts, PJM.

Things have improved in the sense of stabilized a bit and allowed me to function more normally, but I do not really imagine that they will ever get back to how they were when I daftly thought they were not very good when we started this thread.

I am looking forward to the Pines' US tour, though.

the pinefox, Monday, 27 February 2012 11:38 (twelve years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.