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Loading... Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close: A Novel (original 2005; edition 2006)by Jonathan Safran Foer
Work InformationExtremely Loud and Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer (2005)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. This book is extremely awesome and incredibly addictive. I had a really hard time putting it down. It made me experience so many emotions. I laughed and cried, and while I was laughing I felt a bit sad, and while crying, I was still happy. From the first page, I was hooked. Oskar is a precocious, inventive child. (I wonder if the author created this boy or if Oskar is strongly based on someone he knows.) There isn't a lot of character development outside the protagonist. Not all the book's questions are answered, but I have the feeling this is one of those books that the more times you read it, the more you discover. This book is a great journey for the reader. It's less of a story and more of an experience. For readers who need all the questions answered and all the storylines wrapped up in a neat, little bow, this may not be for you. But if you are okay making some interpretations on your own, you should love this little boy and his vivid imagination, his idiosyncrasies, and his drive to continue searching for answers. There were a couple of times I wasn't sure where the book was going. It wasn't until I kept reading that I figured it out, but I enjoyed the pace and the style. And as I pointed out earlier, I'm sure that reading this book more than once will show the reader new insights. I'm looking forward to reading it again. Oskar Schell is a 9 year old New Yorker. His self-made visiting card describes him as "an inventor, amateur entomologist, Francophile, letter writer, pacifist, natural historian, percussionist, romantic, Great Explorer, jeweller, detective, vegan, and collector of butterflies." Intelligent beyond his years and almost too smart for his own good, his world collapses suddenly when his father dies in the September 11th terrorist attack on the World Trade Center. In the aftermath of this tragedy, he happens to discover a key left by his father in a vase. Considering it one last treasure hunt to connect with his father, Oskar takes it on himself to locate the lock to which the key corresponds. On the way, he meets many New Yorkers, most of whom have something to teach him and something to learn from him. Oskar's search becomes yours, his joy becomes yours, his heartbreak becomes yours. EL&IC was a wonderful read for me. It does not just have a well-written story but also a interesting (maybe even quirky!) writing style that keeps you moving on steadily. The book has as many light-hearted moments as intense ones. It even contains stories of fictional WWII bombing survivors within its narrative, and those are really horrifying. I couldn't help but feel that Oskar has some mild form of autism because of certain behavioural aspects manifested by him in the story, but the author doesn't mention this. This made me connect to the book even more. Usually, if the protagonist is depicted as a sufferer of some intellectual disability, then the author gives the prime position in the story to the disorder than the character. In this book, it is Oskar who is the focus of the story, not his behaviour. A word of caution though. Just because the protagonist is a 9 year old, don't hand this book to your children, not even young teens. I'd recommend this only for mature readers because of its language (which is quite vulgar for a 9 year old) and certain graphic scenes of violence and death. If you are an audiobook listener, then go for the audiobook without any hesitation. The audio version has multiple narrators, and each of them plays their character so wonderfully that you can't help but live the same emotions while hearing them read. They enhance the book even further. This has been a nice soul-satisfying book. It's been a really long time since I've smiled and sobbed in the course of a single book. My rating: 4.5/5 ******************************************** Join me on the Facebook group, "Readers Forever!", for more reviews and other book-related discussions and fun.
The bigger problem is that Foer never lets his character wander off without an errand. In fact, there is hardly a line in this book that has not been written for the purpose of eliciting a particular emotion from the reader. The novel is a tearjerker. ...The skepticism and satire that marked the best parts of Everything Is Illuminated are nowhere in evidence here. The search for the lock that fits a mysterious key dovetails with related and parallel quests in this (literally) beautifully designed second novel from the gifted young author (Everything Is Illuminated, 2002). The searcher is nine-year-old Oskar Schell, an inventive prodigy who (albeit modeled on the protagonist of Grass's The Tin Drum) employs his considerable intellect with refreshing originality in the aftermath of his father Thomas's death following the bombing of the World Trade Center. That key, unidentified except for the word "black" on the envelope containing it, impels Oskar to seek out every New Yorker bearing the surname Black, involving him with a reclusive centenarian former war correspondent, and eventually the nameless elderly recluse who rents a room in his paternal grandma's nearby apartment. Meanwhile, unmailed letters from a likewise unidentified "Thomas" reveal their author's loneliness and guilt, while stretching backward to wartime Germany and a horrific precursor of the 9/11 atrocity: the firebombing of Dresden. In a riveting narrative animated both by Oskar's ingenuous assumption of adult responsibility and understanding (interestingly, he's "playing Yorick" in a school production of Hamlet) and the letter-writer's meaningful silences, Foer sprinkles his tricky text with interpolated illustrations that render both the objects of Oskar's many interests and the memories of a survivor who has forsworn speech, determined to avoid the pain of loving too deeply. The story climaxes as Oskar discovers what the key fits, and also the meaning of his life (all our lives, actually), in a long-awaited letter from astrophysicist Stephen Hawking. Much more is revealed as this brilliant fiction works thrilling variations on, and consolations for, its plangent message: that "in the end, everyone loses everyone." Yes, but look what Foer has found. Film rights to Scott Rudin in conjunction with Warner Bros. and Paramount; author tour. Is contained inHas the adaptationHas as a student's study guideAwardsDistinctionsNotable Lists
Nine-year-old Oskar Schell is a precocious Francophile who idolizes Stephen Hawking and plays the tambourine extremely well. He's also a boy struggling to come to terms with his father's death in the World Trade Center attacks. As he searches New York City for the lock that fits a mysterious key he left behind, Oskar discovers much more than he could have imagined. No library descriptions found.
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