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Reviews the candy house
Reviews the candy house












reviews the candy house

A Visit from the Goon Squad is a nineteenth-century novel, a modernist novel, a postmodern novel, and actually really enjoyable. You can’t not mention it, but there are other things to talk about. It wasn’t just about the PowerPoint, though in retrospect the PowerPoint seems to have been given the right amount of attention, which is to say a moderate amount. It was 2010, and PowerPoint had been around for twenty-three years, but that didn’t matter, because no one had put one in a novel before, or at least no one who had already written four relatively successful works of fiction. She put a PowerPoint presentation in a novel, and the world said: OMG. I think it’s my favourite book of both last year and this year so far.The Candy House, by Jennifer Egan. In any case, high, high, high recommendation for this book. When I finished the book, I felt that I could start reading it again from the start right away: I enjoyed the individual ideas, stories and characters and a second reading would just deepen my understanding of them, as there’s no real surprise or dramatic arc in the book that make a second reading less enjoyable.īut, instead, I think I’ll go back and read ‘Welcome to the Goon Squad’ again, as I see that it has many of the same characters, and remember little of it after a decade. Coming to the end of it, I was enjoying the writing so much I started slowing down to savour the storytelling all the more. The narrative is a complex mix of humour and tragedy I could be laughing and feeling deep sadness from the same page. We meet characters at different stages of their lives, with most evolving and changing into quite different people. Instead, I delighted in figuring out where they’d made a previous appearance and in what incarnation, and was impressed, in the end, how all the links between the characters turn so many short stories into a novel, with the weight and resonance of one too.Įgan’s writing is emotionally intelligent and intelligent-intelligent she explores some hefty themes in this book, never with a heavy hand, but in a way I found engrossing. While I’ve had some trouble keeping track of characters in massive novels in the last years, Egan’s device, of telling the next story with a character you’ve met before, didn’t wear thin for me.

reviews the candy house

I remember how exciting ‘A Visit from the Goon Squad’ was, but ‘The Candy House’ has blown me away. So, I’m happy that Jennifer Egan has broken this trend. I was disappointed with Hanya Yanagihara’s ‘To Paradise’ after I loved ‘A Little Life’ so much and felt the same with Viet Thanh Nguyen’s ‘The Committed’ after the amazing ‘The Sympathizer’.














Reviews the candy house