After
a recent dry spell of disappointing novels, I happened upon Jennifer Egan’s
2010 Pulitzer Prize winning novel A Visit from the Goon Squad while trolling
Overdrive for available downloads. During my recent spate of audio book
borrowing, I’ve noticed that unless the
pacing and writing is beautifully crafted, I find my mind wandering to other
things during my walks and drives as the book plays like so much white noise in
the background. This is patently not the case for the audio version of Egan’s
novel. Written almost as a series of vignettes
of a large cast of characters, A Visit from the Goon Squad is hard to put down
and easy to pick up. Written with a wit so sharp a reader might hurt themselves,
it held my attention from the introduction of its first character, Sasha, the
former assistant of music executive Benny Salazar. Sasha is a kleptomaniac with
a wry sense of humor and a hopeful, but realistic outlook. During her stint as
the book’s protagonist, she reflects on her attempts at recovery, her
relationship with Benny, and the pleasure she takes stealing; screw drivers, a
child’s scarf, a note found in a lover’s wallet, bath salts, et cetera. The
novel’s point of view then gracefully shifts to Benny himself, like a relay
racer handing off a baton, and the story takes up, not from where Sasha left
off, but before, during a time when she was still employed by the aging, desperate
Benny Salazar. Benny, for his part,
laments his divorce and his apparent loss of libido during the day-in-the-life-of
snapshot of his life that is chapter two.
The novel next picks up, over 30 years earlier with the tale of Benny’s
high school friend in 1979. Here we are treated to a glimpse of the emerging
Punk scene in San Francisco, and are also introduced to Benny’s future music
industry mentor, Lou, as seen through the eyes of seventeen year old Rhea. The
novel then journeys back five years earlier to an African safari and the point
of view of Lou’s then lover and nanny of his children during a ten-day African safari. The novel continues to introduce several other
characters all somehow connected to Benny and/or Sasha as it winds back and
forth through time. Each of these
segments or chapters could easily stand alone as a short story, as each is
vivid and captivating in its own right.
Each and every person is written with care and insight, and as a fan of character-driven
stories, I couldn’t be more pleased with their development. If you’re looking
for a well-written book with a thoughtful and intimate take on human frailty
and redemption, A Visit from the Goon Squad is available for checkout at the
Delphi Public Library in hardback, audio, and EBOOK format.
-Jennifer Wilson
No comments:
Post a Comment